TY - JOUR
T1 - The urban dimension in spatial development
T2 - contributions from spatial economics
AU - Fratesi, Ugo
AU - Abreu, Maria
AU - Bond-Smith, Steven
AU - Corrado, Luisa
AU - Ditzen, Jan
AU - Felsenstein, Daniel
AU - Fuerst, Franz
AU - Ioramashvili, Carolin
AU - Kopczewska, Katarzyna
AU - Monastiriotis, Vassilis
AU - Piras, Gianfranco
AU - Quatraro, Francesco
AU - Ravazzolo, Francesco
AU - Tranos, Emmanouil
AU - Tsiotas, Dimitrios
AU - Yu, Jihai
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 Regional Studies Association.
PY - 2025
Y1 - 2025
N2 - This editorial introduces the nine papers included in this issue of Spatial Economic Analysis (SEA). The papers in this issue study how urban features influence the spatial economy and the mechanisms taking place in cities. The starting point is the importance of agglomerations in the spatial economy and what happens in cities to influence economic and social outcomes at local and wider scales. Specifically, the papers focus on the growth impact of cities that depend on network externalities; how the shape of cities influences migration and growth; the factors that influence the liveability of neighbourhoods; the influence of the urban structure on migration decisions; how external shocks and the possibility to work from home can affect people’s dwelling decisions; and the factors determining the occupancy of multi-family apartments. Furthermore, novel methodologies are presented in this issue in the estimation of the factors determining rent, such as new machine learning algorithms and spatiotemporal hedonic modelling using distributional regression models and Bayesian estimators. In all urban contexts, neighbourhood spillover effects are considered and taken into account in the papers included in the issue.
AB - This editorial introduces the nine papers included in this issue of Spatial Economic Analysis (SEA). The papers in this issue study how urban features influence the spatial economy and the mechanisms taking place in cities. The starting point is the importance of agglomerations in the spatial economy and what happens in cities to influence economic and social outcomes at local and wider scales. Specifically, the papers focus on the growth impact of cities that depend on network externalities; how the shape of cities influences migration and growth; the factors that influence the liveability of neighbourhoods; the influence of the urban structure on migration decisions; how external shocks and the possibility to work from home can affect people’s dwelling decisions; and the factors determining the occupancy of multi-family apartments. Furthermore, novel methodologies are presented in this issue in the estimation of the factors determining rent, such as new machine learning algorithms and spatiotemporal hedonic modelling using distributional regression models and Bayesian estimators. In all urban contexts, neighbourhood spillover effects are considered and taken into account in the papers included in the issue.
KW - cities
KW - liveability
KW - rent
KW - Spatial economics
KW - urban development
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=105007605441&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1080/17421772.2025.2501859
DO - 10.1080/17421772.2025.2501859
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AN - SCOPUS:105007605441
SN - 1742-1772
VL - 20
SP - 169
EP - 174
JO - Spatial Economic Analysis
JF - Spatial Economic Analysis
IS - 2
ER -