Understanding the Trajectories of Population Decline Across Rural and Urban Europe: A Sequence Analysis
Niall Newsham, Francisco Rowe

TL;DR
This study uses sequence and cluster analysis to classify and map diverse population decline trajectories across European regions since 2000, revealing regional and rural-urban differences in decline patterns.
Contribution
It introduces a novel methodological approach to analyze and typify population decline trajectories across multiple European regions over time.
Findings
Seven distinct population decline pathways identified.
Rapid declines in eastern Europe regions.
Urban areas show deceleration in decline.
Abstract
Population decline is projected to become widespread in Europe, with the continental population set to reverse its longstanding trajectory of growth within the next five years. This represents unfamiliar demographic territory. Despite this, literature on decline remains sparse and our understanding porous. Particular epistemological deficiencies stem from a lack of both cross-national and temporal analyses of population decline. This study seeks to address these gapsthrough the novel application of sequence and cluster analysis techniques to examine variations in population decline trajectories since 2000 in 696 sub-national areas across 33 European territories. The methodology allows for a holistic understanding of decline trajectories capturing differences in the ordering, timing, magnitude and spatial structure of population decline. We identify a typology of population decline…
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Taxonomy
TopicsRural development and sustainability · Migration, Aging, and Tourism Studies · Urbanization and City Planning
