Degraded and restituted towns in Poland: Origins, development, problems
Miasta zdegradowane i restytuowane w Polsce. Geneza, rozwój, problemy
Abstract
One of the less known problems in settlement geography is the issue of so-called degraded
and restituted towns. This lack of reconnaissance, however, is perhaps less the result of the
towns’ scarcity than their specificity of being ‘awarded’ or ‘deprived of’ an urban label by means
of strictly socio-political actions. Degraded and restituted towns, hence, are spatial units made
‘rural’ or ‘urban’ instantaneously, irrespective of their de facto state along what is widely considered
a gradual path of (de)urbanization. Instead, they become compartmentalized into two constructed
spatial categories that have survived the onslaught of material transformations and
philosophical repositioning.
While ‘rural’ and ‘urban’ are conceptual binaries that certainly need to be treated with
caution, their cultural salience may cause tangible consequences within national administrative
systems that abide by a formalized rural-urban distinction. This issue becomes particularly
important for settlements that clearly transcend any imagined rural-urban divide, i.e. those,
whose material and immaterial characteristics seem counterfactual to their assigned category.
It is also crucial in formal practices designed to avert such counterfactualities, but whose randomness
of approach more creates confusion than helps straighten out a historical concoction.
Both processes, nonetheless, lend ‘urbanity’ and ‘rurality’ a resonance of objectivity that justifies
their use as guides for a host of developmental endeavors, despite subverting a much more intricate
reality. Degraded and restituted towns are direct derivatives of this.
Drawing on the above-mentioned irreconcilabilities, the aim of this book is to present
and scrutinize degraded and restituted towns through the example of Poland, where these towns
occupy a special niche. For one, Poland, due to its chequered and variegated history, is home to a
conspicuously large number of degraded (828) and restituted (240) towns; for another, Poland’s
relentlessness of formalizing ‘urbanity’ as a category of statistical, political and cultural guidance
has a direct bearing on the lives of the towns’ residents.
Realizing the intricacy of degraded and restituted towns in the face of commonplace rural-
urban ideations, the editors and the 17 contributing Authors of this book have made an effort
to capture the towns’ complexity with special foci on their shrouded origins, developmental
specificities and incurred problems. Owing to the involvement of researchers from different
scientific disciplines and subdisciplines, the undertaken project has helped elucidate the problem
from multiple perspectives: spatial, social, demographic, economic, environmental, historical,
architectural, cultural, legal and philosophical. Allocated into 17 chapters, not only have the
presented interpretations allowed for a first interdisciplinary synthesis on the topic, but they
also helped outline some prospective directions for future research. Moreover, collecting materials
of such diversity into an amalgamated whole has helped identify specific discourses that
enwrap the concept of “urbanity” when seen through its oscillations within formal contexts, and
to which degraded and restituted towns serve as expendable game pieces.
By combining knowledge arrived at through epistemologically different approaches, the
incremental contribution of this book as a whole could be summarized in two attainments:
a) extending theoretical frameworks used to study degraded and restituted towns in terms of
definition, conceptualization and assessment of predispositions for future development on
account of their spatial, legal, socio-economic and historical characteristics;
b) initiating an anticipated discussion on a number of important and current topics related to
the practices of degradation and restitution that have not received adequate attention, e.g.,
the urbanity-vs.-rurality paradox, the changeability of human settlement forms vs. the consequences
of rigid spatial categorizations; the role of various actors in shaping the socioeconomic
reality under the guise of an ossified binary; or identifying spatio-conceptual conflicts
as future challenges for local, regional and national policy.
Link to web site
https://depot.ceon.pl/handle/123456789/9200
Publisher
Copyright 2015 by University of Gothenburg
Other description
The book has been peer-reviewed independently by two specialists, and presented/
discussed at an official higher seminar at the Unit of Human Geography, Department of
Economy and Society, School of Business, Economy and Law, University of Gothenburg,
Viktoriagatan 13, Gothenburg, Sweden, on Monday 25 January 2016, 13.00.
View/ Open
Date
2015Editor
Krzysztofik, Robert
Dymitrow, Mirek
Keywords
degraded towns, restituted towns, urbanity, rurality, formalization, Poland
Publication type
book
ISBN
91-86472-76-3
ISSN
0347-8521
Series/Report no.
Choros
2015:2
Language
eng