Présence des cadres et distribution résidentielle des actifs dans les principales villes françaises

Works on the residential geography of active people in large towns have especially stressed the opposition between homes of active people and more intellectual professions and workmen’s and employees’ homes. This is where the concentration of executives is the highest—this phenomenon had been studie...

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Main Author: Jean-François Léger
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Université des Sciences et Technologies de Lille 2013-12-01
Series:Espace populations sociétés
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/eps/5583
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spelling doaj-bf320387ebb5469ea8054a27c3b49b002020-11-25T00:05:33ZengUniversité des Sciences et Technologies de LilleEspace populations sociétés0755-78092104-37522013-12-012013313515610.4000/eps.5583Présence des cadres et distribution résidentielle des actifs dans les principales villes françaisesJean-François LégerWorks on the residential geography of active people in large towns have especially stressed the opposition between homes of active people and more intellectual professions and workmen’s and employees’ homes. This is where the concentration of executives is the highest—this phenomenon had been studied the most in the metropolis. In France, academic articles have naturally been dominated by works about Paris. Recently, some research has reintroduced intermediate professions and renewed examination of the dualism of the economy. The social and economic capacity of these active people to disperse quite widely within the Parisian agglomeration has reduced the conventional pattern of an opposition between the well-to-do quarter and the working-class neighbourhood. But what about the situation in the provinces—in towns where there are almost a million people? Do these provinces emulate the Parisian spatial model—which is still dominated by a certain social segregation of well-to-do classes—or are their residential areas more socially diverse? This article attempts to answer this question through a comparison of the 2009 social geography of households in which the householder is an active individual in one of the seven largest metropolises in France (Paris, Marseille, Lyon, Lille, Nice, Toulouse, and Bordeaux). This comparative approach and the focus given to intermediate professions reveal much greater social diversity in the provinces, despite little variation within the cities.http://journals.openedition.org/eps/5583french metropolisresidential geographyhouseholdsactive peoplesocial diversity
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jean-François Léger
spellingShingle Jean-François Léger
Présence des cadres et distribution résidentielle des actifs dans les principales villes françaises
Espace populations sociétés
french metropolis
residential geography
households
active people
social diversity
author_facet Jean-François Léger
author_sort Jean-François Léger
title Présence des cadres et distribution résidentielle des actifs dans les principales villes françaises
title_short Présence des cadres et distribution résidentielle des actifs dans les principales villes françaises
title_full Présence des cadres et distribution résidentielle des actifs dans les principales villes françaises
title_fullStr Présence des cadres et distribution résidentielle des actifs dans les principales villes françaises
title_full_unstemmed Présence des cadres et distribution résidentielle des actifs dans les principales villes françaises
title_sort présence des cadres et distribution résidentielle des actifs dans les principales villes françaises
publisher Université des Sciences et Technologies de Lille
series Espace populations sociétés
issn 0755-7809
2104-3752
publishDate 2013-12-01
description Works on the residential geography of active people in large towns have especially stressed the opposition between homes of active people and more intellectual professions and workmen’s and employees’ homes. This is where the concentration of executives is the highest—this phenomenon had been studied the most in the metropolis. In France, academic articles have naturally been dominated by works about Paris. Recently, some research has reintroduced intermediate professions and renewed examination of the dualism of the economy. The social and economic capacity of these active people to disperse quite widely within the Parisian agglomeration has reduced the conventional pattern of an opposition between the well-to-do quarter and the working-class neighbourhood. But what about the situation in the provinces—in towns where there are almost a million people? Do these provinces emulate the Parisian spatial model—which is still dominated by a certain social segregation of well-to-do classes—or are their residential areas more socially diverse? This article attempts to answer this question through a comparison of the 2009 social geography of households in which the householder is an active individual in one of the seven largest metropolises in France (Paris, Marseille, Lyon, Lille, Nice, Toulouse, and Bordeaux). This comparative approach and the focus given to intermediate professions reveal much greater social diversity in the provinces, despite little variation within the cities.
topic french metropolis
residential geography
households
active people
social diversity
url http://journals.openedition.org/eps/5583
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