Abstract
With more than 20 years of European post-socialist transition
behind us, research on the cities of Central and Eastern Europe
(CEE) has yet to be situated in contemporary urban theory. Placed
within a context of growing research interest on CEE cities, this
theme issue on Heteropolitanization: Social and Spatial Change in
Central and East European
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Cities takes some steps in this direction
by bringing together frontline research on the transformations of
urban space in post-socialist Europe. With their experience of state
socialism now distant in the past, CEE cities have rapidly transformed
from industry-based production spaces into modern hubs
for tertiary and quaternary functions (Borén & Gentile, 2007; Leetmaa,
Tammaru, & Anniste, 2009). Besides this far-reaching economic
transformation, urban changes in CEE are also nested in
multiple paths of development that stem from differences in the
inherited national variants of the centrally planned economic system,
as well as in the specific trajectories of present day societal
transformation. In this respect, one of the most intriguing ongoing
debates questions the nexus between social and spatial change
(Marcin´ czak, 2012; Marcin´ czak, Musterd, & Ste˛pniak, in press;
Ruoppila & Kährik, 2003; Sy´ kora, Temelová, Novák, & Ourˇednícˇek,
2006; Tammaru & Leetmaa, 2007).
Urban living had a particular meaning under socialism: on the
one hand, it signified progress and economic prosperity, but on
the other it was intended to foster collective values at the expense
of individualism, which was perceived—and sometimes even persecuted—
as a bourgeois attitude (Andrusz, 1987; Harris, 1970; Smith,
1996a). Cities were regarded as the focal points for the realization of
the aspired fast modernization of the economy and in the creation
of the just and classless society (Bater, 1980; Sailer-Fliege, 1999).
Large standardized housing estates, whose ubiquitousness is one
of the most striking visual features of the CEE city, became the iconic
manifestation of these aims (Brade, Herfert, &Wiest, 2009; Gentile
& Sjöberg, 2010a, 2010b; Kovács & Herfert, 2012; Kährik &
Tammaru, 2010; Temelová, Novák, Ourˇednícˇek, & Puldová, 2011).
The social stratification order in CEE countries has been reshuffled
since the demise of state socialism in 1989–1991 (Bandelj &
Mahutga, 2010; Cao & Nee, 2000; Szelényi & Kostello, 1996).
Although the impact of marketization on social inequalities depends
on the particular modus operandi of the market in different
countries in transition, social inequalities increased considerably
as markets transformed social mobility (Aristei & Perugini, 2011;
King & Szelényi, 2005). These changes in urban social stratification
could be expected to be reflected in urban socio-spatial structures.
First and foremost, mobility within urban regions increased substantially
(Ahas, Aasa, Silm, & Tiru, 2010; Krišja¯ne & Be¯rzin š,
2012; Novák & Sy´ kora, 2007; Tammaru, 2005): many people were now able to move from the large housing estates to two main urban
area types that were underdeveloped or simply neglected under
socialism, i.e., the inner city and the suburban ring (Borén &
Gentile, 2007; Haase, Grossmann, & Steinführer, 2012; Leetmaa
et al., 2009; Marcin´ czak & Sagan, 2011; Sy´ kora, 2009; Temelová
& Dvorˇáková, 2012). This is the result of city center’s renaissance
through multiple channels of regeneration and revitalization on
the one hand (Kiss, 2002; Kovács, 1998, 2009; Temelová, 2007)
and the burgeoning of new residential developments beyond the
city boundaries on the other (Golubchikov & Phelps, 2011; Kok &
Kovács, 1999; Ourˇednícˇek, 2007; Tammaru, Leetmaa, Silm, & Ahas,
2009).
The relationship between social and spatial change is, however,
not as straightforward as could be expected. In this context, understanding
the various legacy and transition-related factors is essential
to grasp the nature of the nexus. Showing a wide range of
outcomes, this nexus is therefore an important catalyst for the
growing number of studies on the diversity of the experiences of
urban transformation in CEE. The aim of this special issue is to shed
light on a number of these experiences. The goal of this introductory
paper is to provide a theoretical context for these developments.
For this purpose, we introduce and make use of two
idealized city types—Homopolis vs. Heteropolis1—and the corresponding
processes—Homopolitanization vs. Heteropolitanization—
leading towards them, respectively. Heteropolitanization, is argued
to be the prevailing trend in the ongoing processes of transformation
in CEE.
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