How can “gender planning” contribute to tackle the challenges of demographic change?

Ageing society, lack of skilled workforce, changes in work life careers and changes in partner and family models, a shift in societal roles of women and men, young and old, migration flows from rural to urban, multiple residences and new forms of housing and the related spatial impacts are in focus...

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Main Author: Wankiewicz Heidrun
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Sciendo 2014-03-01
Series:European Countryside
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.2478/euco-2014-0006
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spelling doaj-978bccc428174b178c78929fd9483bd92021-09-05T21:00:51ZengSciendoEuropean Countryside1803-84172014-03-0161688710.2478/euco-2014-0006euco-2014-0006How can “gender planning” contribute to tackle the challenges of demographic change?Wankiewicz Heidrun0Independent research professional and consulting engineer at studio planwind.at, Bergheimer Straße 42, 5010Salzburg, AustriaAgeing society, lack of skilled workforce, changes in work life careers and changes in partner and family models, a shift in societal roles of women and men, young and old, migration flows from rural to urban, multiple residences and new forms of housing and the related spatial impacts are in focus of demographic change. It is obvious that demographic change is not to be managed without gender and equality issues. Spatial planning has a crucial role in facing these challenges as spatial planning laws demand to ensure equal access to housing, services and labour markets and to organize transparent and inclusive decision making procedures. The paper explores key concepts, methods and selected case studies from Europe on gender planning trying to focus on the potential for innovating planning discipline and tackling with demographic change issues in rural areas. Cases from Bavaria and Austria compared to rural regions in Eastern Germany with high female emigration show concrete planning approaches.https://doi.org/10.2478/euco-2014-0006planning for the everydaygendered distribution of workspatial living conditions of women and men in rural areasspatial impacts of demographic changesupportive infrastructuresparticipation
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Wankiewicz Heidrun
spellingShingle Wankiewicz Heidrun
How can “gender planning” contribute to tackle the challenges of demographic change?
European Countryside
planning for the everyday
gendered distribution of work
spatial living conditions of women and men in rural areas
spatial impacts of demographic change
supportive infrastructures
participation
author_facet Wankiewicz Heidrun
author_sort Wankiewicz Heidrun
title How can “gender planning” contribute to tackle the challenges of demographic change?
title_short How can “gender planning” contribute to tackle the challenges of demographic change?
title_full How can “gender planning” contribute to tackle the challenges of demographic change?
title_fullStr How can “gender planning” contribute to tackle the challenges of demographic change?
title_full_unstemmed How can “gender planning” contribute to tackle the challenges of demographic change?
title_sort how can “gender planning” contribute to tackle the challenges of demographic change?
publisher Sciendo
series European Countryside
issn 1803-8417
publishDate 2014-03-01
description Ageing society, lack of skilled workforce, changes in work life careers and changes in partner and family models, a shift in societal roles of women and men, young and old, migration flows from rural to urban, multiple residences and new forms of housing and the related spatial impacts are in focus of demographic change. It is obvious that demographic change is not to be managed without gender and equality issues. Spatial planning has a crucial role in facing these challenges as spatial planning laws demand to ensure equal access to housing, services and labour markets and to organize transparent and inclusive decision making procedures. The paper explores key concepts, methods and selected case studies from Europe on gender planning trying to focus on the potential for innovating planning discipline and tackling with demographic change issues in rural areas. Cases from Bavaria and Austria compared to rural regions in Eastern Germany with high female emigration show concrete planning approaches.
topic planning for the everyday
gendered distribution of work
spatial living conditions of women and men in rural areas
spatial impacts of demographic change
supportive infrastructures
participation
url https://doi.org/10.2478/euco-2014-0006
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