INTERACTIONS BETWEEN SPREAD-AND-BACKWASH, POPULATION TURNAROUND AND CORRIDOR EFFECTS IN THE INTER-METROPOLITAN PERIPHERY: A CASE STUDY

In this study we examine a portion of the inter-metropolitan periphery with explicit attention to the impact of a large nonmetropolitan center on a changing spatial structure. In particular we consider the ways in which three familiar concepts spread-and-backwash the population turnaround and corridor effects have expressed themselves in a portion of the inter-metropolitan periphery....The complex interactions between these aspects of metropolitan structure and growth are viewed primarily from the vantage point of a single large nonmetropolitan city (NMC) Portsmouth Ohio. The focus is on the period between 1960 and 1980....This study suggests that the emphasis on randomized samples of county-level data dispersed over large areas may have obscured a complex rural-area pattern that is evolving around corridors and hierarchical sets of nonmetropolitan cities of different sizes. (EXCERPT)

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