Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of figures
- List of tables
- Freface
- List of abbreviations
- Introduction
- 1 Spontaneous urban development: in search of a theory for the Mediterranean city
- 2 Cities of silence: Athens and Piraeus in the early twentieth century
- 3 The Greek ‘economic miracle’ and the hidden proletariat
- 4 The ‘golden period’ of spontaneous urban development, 1950-67
- 5 Industrial restructuring versus the cities
- 6 The end of spontaneity in urban development
- 7 Athens and the uniqueness of urban development in Mediterranean Europe
- References
- Index
5 - Industrial restructuring versus the cities
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 23 November 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of figures
- List of tables
- Freface
- List of abbreviations
- Introduction
- 1 Spontaneous urban development: in search of a theory for the Mediterranean city
- 2 Cities of silence: Athens and Piraeus in the early twentieth century
- 3 The Greek ‘economic miracle’ and the hidden proletariat
- 4 The ‘golden period’ of spontaneous urban development, 1950-67
- 5 Industrial restructuring versus the cities
- 6 The end of spontaneity in urban development
- 7 Athens and the uniqueness of urban development in Mediterranean Europe
- References
- Index
Summary
Why, in a rationally organized society, ought London to remain a great centre for the jam and preserving trade, and manufacture umbrellas for nearly the whole of the United Kingdom? … Why should Paris refine sugar for almost the whole of France? Why should one-half of the boots and shoes used in the United States be manufactured in the 1,500 workshops of Massachusetts? … The industries must be scattered all over the world; and the scattering of industries amidst all civilized nations will be necessarily followed by a further scattering of factories over the territories of each nation.
P. Kropotkin (1974 edn: 155)As industrial capital becomes more mobile, the 1970s have been a period of radical transformation of cities and regions. Powerful trends in the direction of decomposition of the production process of many once vertically integrated industries, tend to reverse the trend towards integration which characterized the first decades of the twentieth century in the fordist drive for mass production and consumption (Scott and Storper 1986: 11). The consequent restructuring toward flexible accumulation creates new core/periphery hierarchies, which have much affected the NICs. In Southern Europe, restructuring involves both the formal sector, in which certain industry groups decline while others emerge, and the informal sector. Researchers have focused heavily on the latter. Informal activities have always been growing in the Mediterranean, but recently flexible accumulation revitalized small industry and articulated it in the capitalist economy.
Analysis up to this point has illustrated the transformation of Greater Athens and Salonica into the principal productive centres of Greece during the 1960s and the rise of the working class in urban society and urban growth processes.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Mediterranean City in TransitionSocial Change and Urban Development, pp. 172 - 208Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1990