Periphery
From Geography
Definition
Peripheria is an old Greek term that is used to describe the outside. In geographical terms we usually speak about the periphery in contexts of cities. The periphery is usually the lesser developed part of town that is usually located at the edge of the cities and far away from the often beatifull city centres. Periphery is an important term in geography and we can find this term in a lot of theories like the theories from christaller and other theories that involve spatial interaction.
Different scale levels.
When we use the geographic term of periphery we can look at this term at different scale-levels. We can for instance look at this definition on a city perspective. An example is that the neighborhoods at the edges of cities are usually less beautifull and developed than the city centres.
We can also look at this term at a bigger scale level. Countries for example also have a centre and a periphery. In the Netherlands 'de Randstad' can be seen as the (economic) centre of the country while for example the province of Drenthe can be seen as the periphery because of the lower (economic) activity.
Conclusion
Periphery is an important term within the field of human geography. A lot of theories from very influential scientists use this term and build theories around it. therefore it is nescessery for every human geographer to know what this term means. The contrary term to periphery is centre. The centre is the core area of a region, where most (social, economic or other) activity takes place.
Contributors
- Created by Jan-Peter Hoste s4026349
- Edited by Robert Wursten on october 10th 2012