Geoforum, Vol. 6, pp. 125-136.
1975. Pergamon Press Ltd. Printed in Great Britain
Concerning the Notion of ‘SubRegion’: Zum Begriff “Subregion”
the French Case
im Falle Frankreichs
A propos de la notion de sous-rhgion : examen a partir du cas francais
H. NONN,
Strasbourg*
Summary: At least in France the sub-region is a living spatial entity. It is partly the heir of structures established in the pre-industrial epoch, receiving from the ancient ‘pays’ and old administrative structures the sense of belonging to a certain social cadre held by a population. For a long period the weak development of an hierarchy of urban services made most towns of equal standing, limiting the growth of commercial relationships end the dimensions of functional spaces. With the growth of en hierarchy of urban services, and improvement in accessibility the functional units have enlarged, breaking unequally the former cadres, and creating polarisations of various scales. Where the metropolises have not become dominant the sub-regions remain sufficiently autonomous, around a town of medium size. More often, in every case where local polarisations have been progressively effaced, and economic spaces have enlarged immeasurably and where the administrative region is seeking identity, the sub-region is reasserted as a social functional space in the pattern of customary life-style, and appears acceptable as a level in the operation of spatial management. Zusammenfassung: In Frankreich zumindest ist die Subregion eine rlumliche Realitlt. Sie ist z.T. Erbe der Strukturen aus vorindustrieller Zeit. Von den alten “Llindern” als Verwaltungseinheiten her umgibt die BevBlkerung ein Ansehen einer bestimmten sozialen Stellung. Eine lange Zeit hindurch differenzierten sich die Stedte kaum durch die Hierarchic der Dienstleistungen. Entsprechend stagnierten die Handelsbeziehungen und die Ausdehnung der Funktionalrtiume. Das lnderte sich mit dem Wachstum der Dienstleistungshierarchie. Mit der Verbesserung der Zu&nglichkeit konnten sich die funktionalen Einheiten ausdehnen. Damit brachen die alten Gefiige auf, und es entstenden Polarisationen verschiedenen AusmaRes. Sofern nicht Metropolen vorherrschend wurden, blieben jedoch die Subregionen rund urn eine Mittelstadt hinreichend autonom. Dariiberhinaus haben sich die Subregionen als soziale Gefiige-Einheiten sogar stabilisiert und bieten sich als Verwaltungskategorie an, gerade wenn die Polarisationsvorglnge und das wirtscheftsrlumlithe Wachstum unbewtiltigt bleiben. R&sumB: La sous-rggion est une entite spatiele vivante, du mains en France. Elle est en partie I’h&ti&re des structures mises progressivement en place B I’bpoque pr&industrielle, recueillant des anciens “pays” et des vieilles structures administratives le sentiment des populations d’appartenir B un certain cadre de vie sociele. Longtemps la faible hierarchisation des services offerts per les villes rend&t assez Bgeles les fonctions urbaines et limitait spatialement la vie de relations comme les dimensions des espaces fonctionnels. Ces unites fonctionnelles se sent certes Blargies, avec I’am&lioration de I’accessibilit8, la hierarchisetion des services, faisent inbgalement &later les cadres anciens, et cr&ent des polarisations d’ampleur. diverse. LB air les metropoles n’ont pu largement s’imposer, des sous-rkgions assez autonomes se sent confortbes autour d’une ville moyenne. Le plus souvent, en tous cas, tandis que s’effacent de plus en plus des polarisations trop locales et que les espaces Bconomiques s’8largissent pour leur part dbmesurbment tandis que la rbgion administrative se cherche encore, le niveau sous-rbgional en tant qu’espace social fonctionnel s’affirme sur le plan de la vie “habituelle” et apparait actuellement comme un Echelon susceptible d’Btre bien accept6 dens les operations d’ambnagement spatial.
As there
is a tendency
try to define undertake
structural
arises as to whether divisions,
in current
or explain
geographical
the concept
and regional
of region,
analysis,
literature
the question
it is valid to insist upon smaller
such as the ‘sub-region’.
to
and to spatial
One is in fact encouraged
to do so by the frequently organisation
space (KAYSER, ambiguity-cf.
Prof. Dr. Henri NONN, lnstitut de GBographie, Universitb LouisPasteur, 43 Rue Goethe, F-67 Strasbourg, France.
1969)
character
of regional
of ‘non-metropolised’
and even by the commonly (1971)-of
spatial organisations
noted
the notion which
could be
‘sub-region’.
The guiding factor definition
125
imperfect
by the existence
BEAUJEU-GARNIER
of region or dependent termed
l
evidenced
should
of the region.
naturally
JUILLARD
be the most accepted recently
re-examined
GeoforumiVolume G/Number 211975
126
the definition
(JUILLARD,
fact that it is based on a framework
1962, 1972). emphasising the system of flows, that it is a
of life in which a certain system of relations
functions and is its cohesive force. But as such frameworks
are not only the result of functional service relationships. Many elements intervene which affect the regularity of the distribution of spatial structural elements: natural ‘uneveness’ or the weight of history, the all to familiar
exist at different spatial levels, the region is “the level, just
limitation
below the national level, where the various forces, which
various kinds of borders or of the urban pattern.
are playing a role in economic and social life, acquire a structure and interact” (JUILLARD,
1972). From this point
of view, the subregion is essentially the same; it can be considered a dependent spatial unit animated by a ‘medium-sized’ town, which serves as a relay of a metropole and provider of more current services. The question is whether an approach, which relies on the organisation of a service hierarchy and of its distributive centres, as it does onthe use made of them, can be considered adequate.
imposed by administrative divisions, the role of
One also finds in geographical literature the concept of the sub-region which relies on characteristics derived from natural geography or cropping patterns and even on types of settlement and of living. (GALLOIS, 1908, p.59). This point of view is still found in numerous geography text books. The more-or-less explicit association of patterns resulting from landscapes woven by man’s past hold on his environment, and of those which derive from contemporary
socio
economic or demographic aspects, is used for the establish-
In countries like ours, with a long history of civilisation, it
ment of the subdivisions realised by I.N.S.E.E.
seems that the intermediary
National de la Statistique et des Etudes Economiques)
grades of spatial organisation
(Institut
‘agricultural regions! Similarly, areas are often distinguished which are noted for their dependence upon the same dominant economic factor, or even those affected by similar difficulties
(the
‘region’ or the ‘basin’ of the Lorraine coal fields, the ‘Valenciennois’,
etc.
.)
In short, closer consideration is called for: in the first place to clarify the notion itself; secondly to see more clearly if the subregion is, or ought to be, a coherent and structured spatial unit; and thirdly, if in that case it is clearly integrated into the geographical region by hierarchical processes, and what is its place in a regional planning policy.
1. The Place of the Pre-industrial ;
HAUTE-SAONE
Heritage
With respect to regional organisation, the past has bequeathed us both certain principles of standardisation and of subdivision which intervene to this day (cf. spread of agrarian systems). Because there was a lack of large scale commercial transactions, involving large numbers of people, at the time of the pre-industrial economies, the more obvious
Fig. 1 Departmental and district divisions of Lorraine: 1. actual frontiers of France 2. departmental boundaries 3. district boundaries.
regional structures were linked to aspects of the political or social life (CLAVAL, 1968, p. 312). which often had a markedly fragmented nature. A division of the land into ‘pays’, which is perpetuated by the nomenclature of present day school text books, appears
Verwaltungsgrenten in Lothringen: 1. Staatsgrenze 2. Departementgrenze 3. Distriktgrenze. La 1. 2. 3.
Lbrraine divisbe en departements et en districts: fronti&es actwelles de la France limite de departement limite de district.
to be the persistence of ancient subdivisions, still customary, of our regions. In fact this term cannot be likened to that of sub-region, considered as a functional structure, and history easily helps to prove this. However, certain entities cannot be contested; some are distinguishable by dominant physical aspects (the Sologne, the Crau, the Morvan, the Landes), others mainly by the forms of rural life (the Pays of Caux, the Beauce). But many have experienced historical
GeoforumlVolume G/Number 211975
127
vicissitudes, a good many variations in their dimensions and
by the French Revolution prolonged the existence of the
limits, in their very existence.
former regional framework.
In fact, a close look reveals that the ‘pays’ are not necessarily an exact and systematic interpretation
is
such structures, and makes it possible to assessthe first
of the preindustrial
types and dimensions of structured space of an
spatial organisation. L. GALLOIS does have the merit of
‘administrative’
having attempted to show that the permanence of a good
largest territorial
number of these ‘pays’ implies in the main the expression of
nature; (JUILLARD, 1964, 1967). The divisions of the ‘Ancien Regime are only
tolerably cohesive. The province in the 17th and 18th
a popular feeling of belonging to a space which is essentially rural.
Even if such an assertion
questionable, it at least expresses the permanent aspect of
centuries was principally of a military nature, and the
Certain ‘pays’ already existed in an ecclesiastical or an
‘g&&a/M
administrative form which covered them fairly well; others
essentially fiscal. It could also have been said
that at this moment the twelve large provinces of the ‘Etats
have constantly resisted being broken down by administrative
g&reraux’ only amounted to an official designation.
or political forces. This implies that the constitutional foundation of many ‘pays’ was not the systematic estab-
However, within these provinces the basis of a system of relations at an intermediate
lishment of hierarchical ties, or those of domination.
level was taking form, in
accordance with the improvement of transport and the
One cannot here, of course, deny the organising role of
beginnings of the development of a hierarchy of urban
towns. But obviously the ‘pays’ can only be identified with
poles. The Constituent Assembly found there its inspiration
the city, which is its animating influence, if there have been
when creating the departments.
real and reciprocal interactions between the town and its surrounding countryside, and if the town has represented a
This study also prompts the consideration ofprevious
symbol of social cohesion.
polarisations
urban
The most irn-portant point is undoubtedly
the
very poor hierarchical organisation of the towns. It was The organising influence of government-including government-of
urban
more a regular distribution of fairs and markets of local
a precise nature, has affected these close
ties and the community
interest; the services in different towns, even of different
conscience.
sizes, were very similar, the absence or insufficiency of a hierarchical organisation being both the cause and the
For that reason we must give some consideration to the weight of forme,r administrative divisions. They only really set in motion a territorial division into units of subregional size after the growth of centralised authority.
Going beyond
the parish or the commune, the fief has never been anything but an entity based on individual feudal relationships. ‘A castle-ward’ writes B. GUENiE, “is foremost a feudal and domainial reality.
. ,, linked to a castle are, on the one hand,
the lands and the immediate rights held by the feudal lord, on the other, the fiefs held from him.
. .” thus, ‘I. . .
generally speaking it is comprised of an enclosed town, its outskirts, and three or four nearby villages entirely dependent on the castle,: revolving round this nucleus, but separated from it, the estates and fiefs, either in groups or individually, are strewn across the countryside in such a way that, properly speaking, a castle-ward appears as an ill defined arrangement.
. of interlocking units” (GUENCE,
1963, p.68). What awareness could the common people have had of spatial organisation) From the thirteenth century onwards, this arrangement alters owing to dependence on larger, royal castle-wards. At the end of the Middle Ages, a unit thought of in the tl’opr&
twelfth century as an area dependent on a distant castle, is considered with reference to the nearest castle which encompasses it. The idea of personal ties is superceded by that of proximity, administration.
.
or of location, and by that of royal
Then in the fourteenth century comes the
progressive establishment of bailiwicks. One may consider that the cantons and the districts created
J
c ClaVerle
I1!313!
_\*__’
Fig. 2
. .
Catchment areas of urban centres in South-West France, around 1820. EinfluRbereiche stsdtischer Zentren in Sldfrankreich urn 1820 Les espaces structur6s autour des villes et des bourgs en Aquitaine et Languedoc vers 1820 (d’aprss J.P. CLAVERIE, 1973)
Geoforum/Volume
128
consequence [cLAVAL,
of a deficient
an elementary local polarisation in 1820, because of a lack
‘regional’ framework.
1968, pp. 319-325,
JUILLARD
11979, 1972:
western regions), CLAVERtE f3973, for Aquitaine and Languedoci, WE&E
11963, p.48, Paris
region).]
A study of
well-known cases shows that as far as ‘a functional organisation of space’ is concerned, certain ‘pays’ still only knew
of
Type of activity: 1. matal transformation, ironmongarr;, press, rolling, 2. basic metallurgy: foundary, steel, 3. mechanical construction, machine too& 4. electrical enginaering, screw Gutting, precision mechanics, 5. chemical industry, 6. wood, paper, furnitures, food, building. (From 6. DEZERT)
Standorte der Fabriken und Zulieferer der Peugeot-Gruppa, 1. Fabriken der Peugeot-Gruppe, 2. Fabriken direkter Zulieferer, 3. Fabriken indirek?ar Zuiiaferer. BescMftigte:
Die Kreisfllchen sind proportional zur
‘sub-regianal’ poles. Those at a distance from the and the currents
innovation could only form a structure
round
atomistic market towns (Corbieres, Sundgau.
of small
. .).
On the whole a historical approach only partially throws
Beschlftigtenzahl f 1966-671,
in Tausend.
Produktionstyp: 1, Metallverarbeitung, PreR- und Walzwerke, 2. Stahlerzeugung, Giegerei, 3. Meschinenbau, 4. alektrische Aggregate, Feinmechanik, 5. chemisehe Produkrion, 6. Hofzund Papienterarbeitung, Nahrun~smi~el, Bau.
Locstion of factoriss: 1. Factories of tha Peugeot-group, 2. factories of Peugeot’s direct sub-contractors. 3. factories of Peugeot’s indirect sub-contractors. Nwrrber ofe~pioyees: The circles are proportionais to the personnel employed at the factories flB65-67): numbers in thousands.
real
main fines of communization
Luxation of factories and sub-contractors of the Peugeot-group.
Fabrikstandorte:
G/Number 2/1975
e
fmplantation de5 usines du groupe Peugeot et da ses sowtraitants. Localisation des mines: 1. wines du groupe Peugeot, 2. kahiissement sous-traitant direct f&n&alement partielf de Peugeot, 3. &ablissement sous-traitant indirect. fmportenca c&s effectifs: cerclas prpportionnels aux personnels sur les lieux des etablissements (1965-1967) Nature d’activit& 1. transformation des metaux, quincaillerie,
emboutissage.laminage, 2. m&allurgia de base, funderie, acikie, 3. construction m&xnique, apparaillage, 4. BtectrotiCanique, decoftatage, m&xnique de p&&on, 6. industrie chimique, 6. b&r, papeterie, meubles, afimentation, batiment.
GeoforumIVolume G/Number 211975
light on theproblem
129
The hierarchical systems progressively assert themselves in
of the sub-region and of the region-
but at least it permits to underline the following aspects:
these conditions, the former spatial reality ‘explodes’. Between the residential districts and place of work or
allegiance (ancient. but ill-defined) and the progressive frameworks which transfer
to the benefit of a territory
the earlier personal links.
(b) The frameworks are principally
and selective diversification
of services as with the widening scope of demand. Under
(a) The outline of spatial frameworks going beyond local horizons relies on a dual basis: an awareness of territorial organisation of institutional
keeping with the concentration
shopping and service centres an ever greater disassociation is established, whereas, at the same time, the possibilities to escape, grow. A. FREMONT even sees a “divorce between
those of social relation-
man and location”. Superficially,
this would appear totally
ships in which they add to the feeling of sharing the same
with the present state of affairs. However, some observations
way of life. When the organising elements more or less
can be made.
combined, and reinforced each other, then the ‘pays’ and On the introduction
‘sub-regions’ (or regions) were able to emerge. In other cases, different territorial
of railways, taking into account a
certain economic uniformity,
units were partially identified
cross roads were relatively
regularly distributed, and classed simply according to the
with a specific spatial organisation.
number of branches and the classification of the roads Thus spatial dimensions are defined by the migratory
(JUILLARD, 1970). By increasing the speed of communi-
horizons of “regionalising towns” (R. SCHWAB, 1972). by
cations at least fivefold, and favouring the chief towns of
the “espace v&u”
the department as railway junctions, the railways both
(the area defined through personal
relationships), which for A. FR~MONT is “the circle of marriages,
widened the dimensions of regional life, and created or
, . inheritences, property, festivities, encounters,
increased the economic functions superimposed upon the
upon which is superimposed the hierarchy of local centres
administrative functions. Next, the appearance of the motor
and of towns (F&MONT
car modified the network, conserved from the 19th century
(c)
1973).
In fact, very often, to try to distinguish region and sub-
region, before the industrial era, is undoubtedly to solve a falseproblem.
an attempt
Real regions are then but few; thus
road system; by the intensity of traffic caused by industry or transit, and the importance of road junctions was diversified.
it is not possible to give this name to every specific historical
By correlation,
entity, nor to certain extensive economic areas, such as the
introduce changes of yet a different nature, establishing
economic field of the Rhine. E. JUILLARD has preferred the
‘labour recruiting zones’, supply areas of agricultural
the urban and industrial concentrations
designation “an economic region to the scale of the period”
products and purchasing zones. In several areas dense
for areas drained by collecting poles for rural products,
‘industrial basins’ are superimposed on a rural network, or
taking into account the time taken for transport and the
subcontract
state of the roads (cf. the Mans region about 1830,
radiate employment
JUILLARD, 1972a). Within these regions “chief towns of
ing existing equilibria:
districts, never at a distance of more than 2 or 2% hours
Choletais.
networks depending upon an organising centre in workshops and factories, transform mining districts, Porte de Bourgogne,
..
travel” offered about the same level of services as the At the same time, the volution of demands for services
principal poles. This being so, region and sub-region are
leads, quantitatively
practically indistinguishable!
and qualitatively,
to the development
of more clearly defined hierarchies of urban centres and to selective use of their amenities; this gives rise to the
2. Disturbances and New Elements Introduced the Modern Technological Era
by
flourishing of ‘regional urban networks’ (cf. HAUTREUX and ROCHEFORT, 1965).
The functional and coherent cells,,inherited from the pre-
At this point the question again arises as to how one can
industrial period, experience a considerable change with the
distinguish subregional entities. By analogy with what has
revolution in the methods of transport and the
what has been said about the ‘pays’, the term subregion
transformations
does not apply to those areas solely defined by their sharing
induced in the economic structures. Their
inherent momentum,
made of men, labour, capital and local
the same way of life, the same demographical position nor
resources is completely upset. The more fragile and less
the same landscape network reflecting a dominant activity.
organised cells, removed from the influence of innovations, and confined within a self-sufficient system, weaken,
to reveal structures capable of characterising spatial ‘groups’
But one cannot deny that these elements or positions help
lose their labour force or are absorbed by the most dynamic
or ‘subgroups’.
areas more fully endowed with progressive elements. On the
systematically study all workings of the spatial systems
other hand a certain number, mutually strengthening of communications to these riew polarisations.
integrated by the
and trade axes, respond
In order to identify them, one must
without attempting to favour the displacement poles ol; the general flows, It does in fact happen that they translate only a part of their working system.
GeoforumlVolume G/Number
130
211975
On the other hand, real sub-regions impose themselves where
For this reason this approach must be devoted to the “research of realities” (BRUNET, 1972, p.654) and to the
the regional capital has not been ‘regionalising’ and has only
identification
shown a belated interest in establishing an important hold
of cases of actual, functionally
animated,
over the surrounding area. More concerned with playing a
highly coherent subregions having a certain ‘autonomy’.
glamorous or lucrative role, the regional capital has turned An example which seems to be interesting is that of areas
towards, for example, international trade. For this reason
where the regional metropolis has lacked the means of
Strasbourg considered itself for a long time more as a
imposing itself. The polarisation which it would normally
Rhenish town than as the capital of Alsace. In the same way.
exercise has not been able to render dependent on its
ports such as Nantes or Bordeaux have had priority
impulsive force and energy, all those spatial functions which might be expected, by the level and quality of its services.
such ports, Umland and Hinterland
In fact when the ‘time-distance’ factor, which seperates the
cannot be confused.
This being so, the way has long been open for medium-
surrounding area from the capital town, becomes prohibitive,
sized towns, and even small-sized towns, to carry out, for
it is the medium-sized towns, backed up by former pre-
their inhabitants, the functions of distributing service
industrial relations, and in many cases by the strength of the departmental administrative structure which represent the
centres, animating and stimulating the region. In Alsace. Colmar and Mulhouse are important enough to limit
principal animative poles. Thus, these towns animate a region of admittedly
Strasbourg’s immediate role to the Basse Alsace and a few
restricted size, but not a definite subordinate
bordering neighbourhoods (cf. maps of the Atlas de I’Est;
subregion. For example, in the south of France, rich in its ancient urban tissue, Bayonne, Pau in Aquitaine, Perpignan,
1963;
JUILLARD,
1973). And even in the department
NONN,
Narbonne, Montpellier or Nimes in Languedoc-Roussillon spring to mind (cf. regional atlas of these regions, and DUGRAND, 1963).
Fig. 5 .
Troves. 1.
F&. 4 l
Catchment
areas of regional
1.
preferential
2.
attachments
catchment
centres
in the middle
Loire;
urbancentres
to the
regional
.
.
boundaries
of departments.
EinfluBbereiche
regionaler
1.
bevorzugtes
2.
deutliche
3.
Departmentsgrenzen.
1-2 journeys 3-5 journeys
per weekday
4.
6-9 journeys
per weekday
5.
more
than
bus journeys:
on weekdays
3.
Troyes.
per weekday
10 journeys
per weekday.
Zentren
an der mittleren
Loire:
Umland
HBufigkeit
nicht
jeden
werkt?iglicher
Busverbindungen:
Tag Verkehr
2.
1-2
Fahrten
pro Werktag
3.
3-5
Fahrten
pro Werktag
4.
6-9
Fahrten
pro Werktag
5.
mehr
als 10 Fahrten
pro Werktag.
AttraktivitStsrichtungen .
Troyes. 1.
.
of weekday always
2.
1.
capitals 3.
Frequency
not operating
areas
of subordinate
Les sires d’influence 1.
zones
d’influence
2.
rattechement
3.
limites
des centres
r8gionaux:
pref&entielle
des petits
de d8partements.
relais
urbains
aux centre
r&gionaux
interests
in which their regions have not played a sufficient role; for
Nombre
ne fonctionne
de services pas tous
d’autobus les jours
2.
1-2 services
par jour
ouvrable
3.
3-5 services
par jour
ouvrable
4.
6-9 services
par jour
5.
plus
de 10 services
ouvrable par jour
par jour
ouvrables
ouvrable.
ouvrable:
Geoforum/Volume
G/Number 2/1975
river Sambre, the ‘Pays de Maubeuge’, just as on the river
of the Bas-Rhin, centres relaying Strasbourg have been to impose themselves on a ‘sub-region’; Haguenau for example.
Escaut, the ‘Valenciennois’,
In the neighbourhood of Nantes and Bordeaux, Rennes or
are old iron and steel industrial districts, the former still
Angers, Angoullme
or Perigueux have not lacked such
are distinguished in that both
poorly linked with the subgroups in the west of the region,
possibilities.
and both coming to grips with industrial conversion, and
In the aforementioned
both still far from being integrated into the ‘metropolitan
cases, the sub-regions which have
emerged are not, however, exactly structurally comparable. Even if their existence is proved by the study of the urban polarisations of these sub-regions, this is not sufficient to
area’ which nowadays extends as far as Arras and links up with the ‘Pays Noir’ district between Bethune and Douai. At the same time a coastal subregion in the midst of transformation
describe them, so different are the regional densities, the
is being organised, due to the efforts under-
taken around the Dunkerque pole, and the fact that it is still
historical and economic conditions, so distinctive is the
cut off from the Lille area by a rural zone. In this division
urban pattern.
into subgroups, Lille’s role was hindered by the primacy of The example of Alsace is a good illustration where multiple
long dominant relations of the northern centres with Paris,
factors even lead to a veritable rivalry between subregion
or by the extra-regional links and objectives of their
and region. The high density of the regional population
industrial activities.
(190/km*),
dense urban network precociously dynamic, and
activities turned towards a market economy at an early stage, play the most important role. All these factors
Lorraine industrial districts where extra-regional investment
explain today’s ‘urban way of thinking’ marked by frequent recourse to towns. The ‘intermittent
nature’ of
Strasbourg’s regional role is also well known. The Rhenish emporium
from the 13th to 15th centuries, but slightly
orientated towards a hold on the hinterland,
and the Counter-Reformation,
of the original subregions constitued by the Longwy iron and steel basin, the ‘Pays Haut’ which ‘gives on to Thionville,
Of course the subgroups arising in this way are, for the
control of the traffic for the length of the Vosges in the the Reformation
and markets are dominant has allowed the individualisation
or the coal mining districts.
left the
hands of the Piedmont towns. The trials and tribulations
It could be even more enlightening to observe how the frailty of the directional role of Nancy and Metz over the
of
the seven-
most part, of a different nature from those previously mentioned. Here the homogeneous characteristics of
teenth century wars, and the sharing of the political or
countryside and of dominant activities, which are reinforced
religious administrative role, gave several cities the oppor-
today by the difficulties of an excessively specialised
tunity of keeping considerable influence based on close
industrial economy, are an integral part of their structure.
economic and social relations between town and country.
At all events, this structure has done more to individualise
Then Mulhouse organised its own economic space at the
the subgroups within the region in which they developed
time of its growth associated with the textile industry.
than tointegrate
In fact Strasbourg only acquired a really regional role when a connection was made between the development of Strasbourg as a route centre by modern transport methods (1840-1910), (1871-1919)
its role as capital of the annexed Land and its final industrialisation.
(The return in
1919 to the level of chief town of a department has partially interrupted this development until the creation of ‘regions de programme’).
Mulhouse and Colmar were thus able to
construct subregional areas based on a complex network of well rooted relationships, and it has been possible to study which historic, even economic conditions (such as the diffuse character of industrialisation) have allowed centres of even less importance to keep up a subregional (NONN, 1974).
role
them into it.
Other categories of factors than the metropolis limited field of influence, have been able to contribute towards the vitality of subregions. With the above mentioned examples of Lorraine, or the ‘Nord’, the role of economic relationships was brought to mind. No doubt much could be said concerning them. For example, whereas, Normandy
is
increasingly integrated, on this level, into a greater Paris region, Brittany, further removed and less directly in the sphere of influence of the capital, is split up into distinct economic entities, separated by economic objectives which are different at Rennes or Brest, at Quimper or St. Malo, at Vannes or St. Brieuc. Furthermore,
while the press is talking
about a project to unite the two Norman regional planning authorities, it reveals at the same time that the ‘Comite
In other French regions the strengthening of subregional entities in relation to metropolises is the result of different
d’etude et de liaison des interets bretons’ (C.E.L.I.B.)
factors. The growth of industrial basins, over which large
for, and bestowing of administrative structures on, the
towns do not exercise sufficient control, gave rise to a
‘pays’: Cornouailles, Me&, Rance.
spatial structure of relatively autonomous subgroups. The
(Breton action committee)
proposes official recognition pays of Redon or of the
the north of France is split up into several areas, and continued to be thus subdivided until quite recently; on the
In the importance of the economic relations between
132
GeoforumlVolume
G/Number
northern Lorraine and the Sarre, Belgium or Luxembourg,
elements contribute towards the creation of a certain
can be readily found one of the reasons for the present
‘self-awareness’.
211975
assertion of the ‘subregions’ of Sarreguemines, Forbach-StAvold, Thionville and Longwy in relation to the spatial organisation of Lorraine around the Metz-Nancy
3. The Sub-region and Planning
metropolis. It is precisely this awakening of a conciousness of structural
The weight of administrative
and political structures also is
particularities which often, nowadays, leads to the insertion
not inoperative on the conditions of existence of ‘sub-groups’
of the subregion into regional planning. However, other
within the French regions. This weight is first seen, broadly
conditions intervene resulting from the latest socic-economic
speaking, in the force of the departmental
changes, notably polarisation, the relationships between
structure which
has experienced varied regimes and political transformations
towns, industries, etc.
without too much damage. Despite a progressive inability to adapt to modern conditions of life, the department has become more than an administrative structure;. departmental community
. a kind of
has grown up round the chief
In this manner, the changes in commercial structure have spatial repercussions which cannot be ignored: the wholesaler retreats in the face of progress made by the purchasing
town, a sub-group, all the more animated for being the
group, or the bulk buying of supermarkets by direct
object of frequent recourse for public administration,
contract with producers. The existence of the small scale
and
even for the private sector. Does this mean that the sub-
retail trade, based on the local influence of either a rural
region is, more often than not, identified with departmental
centre or a small market town, is threatened by ‘hypermarkets’, or by the spatial diffusion of general stores such
administrative structures?
as ‘Monoprix-Prisunic’, This would be far too rapid a generalisation. The influence of large towns (BABONAUX, this framework,
1966) generally goes beyond
and many government departments have
the hierarchical organisation of the
banking system, and the ever increasing population mobility, For these reasons a certain effacing of local centres takes place which has been studied in Alsace. (NONN,
1974).
taken to covering vaster areas for study and management in their respective sphere. This would give the impression that the socio-economic region inherited from the French Revolution has, in fact, transformed itself into a ‘subregion’, whereas, in reality, we have already seen that, where the regional population density, the economic and social life and the urban pattern make it possible, the sub-regional entities can be smaller than the department. This can also be the case when spatial ‘unevenness’ and the distance factor in the configuration
of the department
intervene; cf. Brittany
or East Lorraine (from Sarreguemines to St.DiB) for example. In the cases where, on the contrary, either distance, lower population densities or less intensive industrialisation
acts
as a brake on regional integration, would not the department take on the functions of the region? This is the case for those parts of the French territory that KAYSER as ‘non-metropolised’
(1969) qualifies
and which cover more than 20% of
the national territory. Despite this, the fact remains that the framework
of relations
of an administrative nature intervenes in the structural elements of sub-groups within the regions. French centralisation does not grant them the same weight as either the Swiss cantons, the Dutch provinces or the British counties, whose
Fig. 6 Agricultural bank 1970: 1. regional offices (one per department) 2. secondary or administrative offices (fixed and permanent) 3. catchment areas of the offices.
dimensions resemble that of our departments, but which have a more animated local existence: but at least it introduces management structures whose dimensions are nearly those which are incurred by recourse to retail
Filialen der Landwirtschaftsbenk im n6rdlichen 1. Regionalvertretung (1 pro Department) 2. Nebenstelle 3. Einzugsbereiche.
ElsaR-Lothringen,
outlets and everyday services. Under these conditions, the functional sub-region is all the more clearly defined in that the fields of these diverse animating factors actually coincide, or that autonomous
Credit agricole 1970: 1. caisses regionales (1 par dbpartement) 2. bureaux auxiliaires ou administratifs ldomicili8s et permanents) 3. aire de rattachement aux bureaux.
1970:
Geoforum/Volume
G/Number 211975
The effect of these transformations
133
is important for the
Actualittk,
21,12.1972).
The centres which benefit, maintain
subregional cemres. If they lose their attraction for certain
their advantage with respect to local centres because of
specialised trades, owing to a too limited selection in
everyday use.
competition
with the wider choice of corresponding trades
in the regional capital (e.g. luxury or less essential goods), and if they lose their privileged position for household goods and television, this time to the advantage of local centres, (because after-sales services need to be nearer to a clientele comprising a rural community),
they gain, at the same time,
a new importance with respect to modern sales techniques. The ‘hypermarkets’,
or failing them, the big supermarkets,
do not reject medium-sized towns, where the population surpasses 20,000,
or even less important chief towns. The
attraction of this type of town is also reflected by the
This is the same case for other elements shown by a map of grammar schools or I.U.T’s. Certain towns, in going beyond the functions of everyday services, gain status. Figure 7 shows the distribution
of I.U.T’s (Institut Universitaire de
Technologie). Apart from the university towns there were Institutes in Valenciennes, Bethune, Calais, Le Havre, Lannion, Quimper, Vannes and St. Nazaire, Angers, Bourges, Angouleme, Montlucon,
Egletons and Rodez,
Names and Toulon, Belfort and Colmar, Epinal, Troyes and Longwy in 1972. A study of the distribution
of regional
hospital centres would no doubt follow the same pattern.
distribution of new, reasonably-sized general stores (e.g. more than 8000m2).
To be convinced of this, one need only
Thus, a true interest for this spatial scale is shown by the
examine the lists drawn up by organisations specialised in
way various public amenities are planned, as in the policy
commercial studies (special panorama 1971, published by
practised by the big distribution
Points de Vente, July 1971 or Atlas des Super-et des
ing that the maps drawn for the Atlas de I’Est which delimit
Hypermarchtk
the commercial catchment areas, banking facilities, coach
of 1.1.1973 in the magazine Libre Service
firms. It is worth mention-
Fig. 7 l
.
University technological Institutes (I.U.T.) = Polytechnics: 1. I.U.T. in a universitv town 2. I.U.T. or I.U.T. section outside a universitv town.
Standorte van lnstituten der Tachnischen Universitat (Polytechnikum): 1. in einer Universitltsstadt 2 in einer Stadt ohne Univenitat.
.
lnstituts Universitaires de Technologie (I.U.T.): 1. I.U.T. dans una ville universitaire 2. I.U.T. ou d&artement I.U.T. hors d’une ville universitaire.
134
GeoforumlVolume
and telephone traffic, disclose a certain Constance in their
G/Number Z/1975
are, in actual fact, related to questions which concerns the
dimension and indicate clearly the intensity of subregional
populations, going beyond the communal level, but still
life.
within the dimensions of the area daily or frequently visited by the inhabitants; in so doing, the planning under considera-
Consequently it would seem logical that this level of
tion affects the population directly. Here, once again, one
spatial organisation be taken into account in town and
comes across, in a different form, and this time of a
country planning. Is this the case?
voluntary nature the desire to engender a bringing together
In fact, the planning authorities were at first preoccupied
of attitudes, an awareness of belonging and of joint
by those of the sub-regional entities whose particular
responsibility which is necessary to accept a certain
structure called for specific reanimative operations, a diver-
distribution of investments; a certain equilibrium
sification of activities and ‘opening out’. Moreover, these
the area of the S.D.A.U.
cases were brought to their attention by development committees or of local economic action, and by specific political or administrative attitudes. Such and such Breton ‘pays’, or that part of Lorraine around Longwy or Sarreguemines
However, one must guard against over-optimism. present moment the S.D.A.U’s
Until the
have rather more often
aspired to establishing a control over urbanisation than to establishing a ‘global’ planning. At least this is the case when
could be quoted as examples.
large towns are concerned. Those S.D.A.U’s
However, the means of intervention most frequently
within
used
which are
established for areas with a limited urban existence or for
up to the present moment, have not been those of ‘global’
over-restricted areas, display the over-riding importance of
planning. Various specific actions have been undertaken,
their dependency on the major centres (cf. NONN, 1971).
in
one place, ‘aid’ for developing sectors in economic difficul-
Consequently, it is perhaps in the S.D.A.U’s
ties or situated in a highly competitive frontier region, in
medium-sized towns of lesser importance, that an accordance
another, aid for industrial conversion, and elsewhere rural
between spontaneous tendencies and voluntary aspects is
renovation operations or agricultural reconversion (cf.
more likely to be realised. Be that as it may, the S.D.A.U.
Armagnac, Auvergne, Limousin, Landes.
. .). In other
established for
would be a possible instrument for the constitution
of a
functional and coherent space.
words, a ‘sectoral’ planning policy. It is above all the elaboration of sch6mas directeurs
The objectives given to the present promotion
~arn~~ag~en~
sized towns in France, also concern this study. Upheld by
et d’ur~nisme
(S.D.A.U.1
(development
plans) which makes it possible to develop a ‘global’ planning
of medium-
the excessive cost of large concentrations of population
programme on a scale which interests us. The S.D.A.U’s.
(external diseconomies), by the demands for a better
defined by the town and country planning act (30.12.1967,
quality of life, by the regular aspect of the French urban
French offical gazette 3.1.1968 28.5.19691,
and connected measures
“fixes the basic objectives for the planning of
pattern, abundant in medium-sized towns, and by the very ‘modest’ density found in France, this policy is capable of
the areas concerned, with particular reference to the exten-
providing the new supports for the expanded and dynamised
sion of urban centres”. Taking into account the relations
organisation of the sub-regions.
between these centres and the neighbouring regions, and “the balance that ought to be conserved between urban growth, agricultural activities, the existence of specialised farms and the conservation of forests and natural sites, these general plans determine, in particular, general land use, the route to be taken by the most important elements of the infrastructure,
the organisation of transport, the
localisation of services and activities.
.” Thus, if urban poles
are the prime consideration, they motivate a combined treatment of all territorial sectors for which they are responsible. S.D.A.U. complementary
example, the medium-sized town. If its function is to take the place of a handicapped or too distant metropolis, its deficiencies, not only on the scale of the built-up area, but also on the regional population scale would have to be If, on the other hand, its function is to relay the impact of
of
economic or social interests which exist between the urban centre and its ‘environment’,
above, concerning the unequal role of metropolises. The action to be undertaken must consider the roie of, for
made up. Is it, therefore, necessary to reinforce its ‘autonomy’
must take into consideration the
aspects and coherence, the community
In fact here one could introduce important nuances which would lead us to the rediscovery of distinctions, established
and expediently
organise all of the resultant exchanges.
the capital, as is the case for the Parisian ‘villes de la couronne’. and to constitute a ‘point d’appui’ or base of operation for the decentralisation and for the planning of a ‘big region’, should the action be carried out from the point of viewof a dependence and framework,
or on a competitive
As they are designed to cover urban centres with more than
basis? If again the medium-sized town is the result of
10,000 inhabitants, and are established on a scale of
industrial or touristic development, and because of the
l/25,000-l/50,000,
recent nature of its development, superimposed on a
the S.D.A.U’s
are concerned with
practically all sub-regional centres. The aspects considered
network of preexistent
centres, what policy must be
GeoforumlVolume
G/Number 211975
practised?Without
135
doubt, toconsolidate
regional foundation,
better its sub
References
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Atlas
Briefly, these questions need to be gone into more deeply, but this is not the place for further discussion. At least they have the advantage of showing the complexity
of the
problem under review. Yet it would seern that the outcome of this analysis is that the notion of subregion is of a truly ‘functional’
nature,
it probably stands out better from the spatial entity defined by the ‘countryside’ or by the sole structures of the
BABONAUX, S.A.B.R.I.
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grands
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pensge
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that the essential part of family life, work, and weekend activities takes place. This does not, of course, exclude regional consciousness. However, because this consciousness relies upon less frequent
recourse, and on even frailer bases
(except perhaps when solid mutual cultural elements exist) it has not been very assertive up till now, as certain difficulties of the regionalisation policy show. The sub-region unit, as a cell with a certain social cohesion, can even, as has been seen, tend to become the basic unit of planning that people will more easily accept over and above the out-of-date local framework,
and which will then help
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