Abstract
This paper investigates the changing post-socialist patterns of social and environmental segregation in Budapest, through a case study of three of its inner-city districts. These quarters represent a north-south cross-section of the city, because they contain the northern edge of the mixed-use residential and commercial urban core of Budapest, in addition to a wider range of historical residential and industrial areas in the inner city, and former industrial suburbs. The paper also includes a review of the spatial structure of the human, built and natural components of the urban ecosystem at the onset of the transformation, with the aim of clarifying how socialist-era trends have influenced urban residential inequalities. This has been supplemented with an outline of the qualitative features and temporal trends of urban spatial ecological differentiation in the post-socialism. The concluding section of the paper outlines the policy issues related to the social and environmental problems observed in the given context.
Original language | English |
---|---|
Title of host publication | Society, Economy, Environment ??? Towards the Sustainable City |
Place of Publication | Gdansk |
Pages | 61-75 |
Number of pages | 15 |
Edition | Bogucki Wydawnyctwo Naukowe |
Publication status | Published - 2005 |
Keywords
- environment
- inequality
- post-socialism
- Poverty
- social segregation
- Sustainable Development