An analysis of family farm growth in western Manitoba : a systems approach

This thesis represents a methodological investigation of the validity of the growth centre concept against the backdrop of S.W. Manitoba. Theoretically, the growth centre is very efficient planning instrument for regional development. In this respect, the grwoth centre can be treated as the corners...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Galapitage, Doolwala Chandrapala
Published: 2012
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1993/6306
id ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-MWU.1993-6306
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-MWU.1993-63062014-03-29T03:44:30Z An analysis of family farm growth in western Manitoba : a systems approach Galapitage, Doolwala Chandrapala This thesis represents a methodological investigation of the validity of the growth centre concept against the backdrop of S.W. Manitoba. Theoretically, the growth centre is very efficient planning instrument for regional development. In this respect, the grwoth centre can be treated as the cornerstone of an investment strategy involving the spatial concentration of investment and the accompanying reorganization or restructuring of geographic space. Furthermore, growth centre programmes can be used as means for realizing specific policy objectives relating to social welfare servicing. There is, however, a marked discrepancy between theory and actuality. This is manifested in the following queries: Do spontaneous growth centres exist? Do these growth centres really affect, either positively or negatively, the development of surrounding areas? If they do, then, what spatial patterns, if any, will be formed? The principal purposes of this thesis will be an attempt to unravel these questions in the aforementioned regional context, namely: (1) to examine whether or not 'growth centres' exist at Brandon and Dauphin respectively, (2) to examine the presumed repercussions of two opposing spill-over effects and, then, to consider the degree of growth transmission from Brandon and Dauphin to the surrounding rural areas, (3) to examine the spatial form of polarized growth around Brandon and Dauphin. In order to compare the effects of different analytic techniques and to get a more precise picture of the development surface in S.W. Manitoba, twelve different techniques, including unrotated and rotated factoring methods, were employed in this study to analyze the same set of data for S.W. Manitoba. The outputs from these factoring techniques were, in turn, regarded as development indexes for a series of cubic trend-surface analyses which were established to test the polarization hypothesis. Finding provided only equivocal support for the existence of development-response surfaces based on Manitoban spontaneous growth centres. 2012-05-17T14:35:40Z 2012-05-17T14:35:40Z 1977 http://hdl.handle.net/1993/6306
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
description This thesis represents a methodological investigation of the validity of the growth centre concept against the backdrop of S.W. Manitoba. Theoretically, the growth centre is very efficient planning instrument for regional development. In this respect, the grwoth centre can be treated as the cornerstone of an investment strategy involving the spatial concentration of investment and the accompanying reorganization or restructuring of geographic space. Furthermore, growth centre programmes can be used as means for realizing specific policy objectives relating to social welfare servicing. There is, however, a marked discrepancy between theory and actuality. This is manifested in the following queries: Do spontaneous growth centres exist? Do these growth centres really affect, either positively or negatively, the development of surrounding areas? If they do, then, what spatial patterns, if any, will be formed? The principal purposes of this thesis will be an attempt to unravel these questions in the aforementioned regional context, namely: (1) to examine whether or not 'growth centres' exist at Brandon and Dauphin respectively, (2) to examine the presumed repercussions of two opposing spill-over effects and, then, to consider the degree of growth transmission from Brandon and Dauphin to the surrounding rural areas, (3) to examine the spatial form of polarized growth around Brandon and Dauphin. In order to compare the effects of different analytic techniques and to get a more precise picture of the development surface in S.W. Manitoba, twelve different techniques, including unrotated and rotated factoring methods, were employed in this study to analyze the same set of data for S.W. Manitoba. The outputs from these factoring techniques were, in turn, regarded as development indexes for a series of cubic trend-surface analyses which were established to test the polarization hypothesis. Finding provided only equivocal support for the existence of development-response surfaces based on Manitoban spontaneous growth centres.
author Galapitage, Doolwala Chandrapala
spellingShingle Galapitage, Doolwala Chandrapala
An analysis of family farm growth in western Manitoba : a systems approach
author_facet Galapitage, Doolwala Chandrapala
author_sort Galapitage, Doolwala Chandrapala
title An analysis of family farm growth in western Manitoba : a systems approach
title_short An analysis of family farm growth in western Manitoba : a systems approach
title_full An analysis of family farm growth in western Manitoba : a systems approach
title_fullStr An analysis of family farm growth in western Manitoba : a systems approach
title_full_unstemmed An analysis of family farm growth in western Manitoba : a systems approach
title_sort analysis of family farm growth in western manitoba : a systems approach
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/1993/6306
work_keys_str_mv AT galapitagedoolwalachandrapala ananalysisoffamilyfarmgrowthinwesternmanitobaasystemsapproach
AT galapitagedoolwalachandrapala analysisoffamilyfarmgrowthinwesternmanitobaasystemsapproach
_version_ 1716658553847021568