Cities and Retail: Sustainable Transformation of Retail in Urban Environments
A special issue of Sustainability (ISSN 2071-1050). This special issue belongs to the section "Sustainable Urban and Rural Development".
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (27 April 2023) | Viewed by 39874
Special Issue Editor
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
The geographies of retailing have for a long time been an established field of research within urban studies. Considering the intrinsic relation between cities and retail, in recent decades, studies have ranged their focus in a significant variety of axes. Among others, we can enhance: (i) the relevance of research on the entrepreneurial transformation of the sector, especially with the appearance of large national and international chains that quickly gain a market share; (ii) the importance of specific retail formats, such as shopping centers, their role in the creation/consolidation of new retail centralities, and impacts on town centers; (iii) the increasing relevance of ecommerce and the current debate about multichannel and omnichannel.
In the new millennium, a significant set of studies have recognized the increased relevance of retail, which is mainly the result of the growing incorporation of retail in urban policies. The wide range of retail-led urban regeneration initiatives developed in several countries attested to this evolution, as well as their analysis in scientific literature. Moreover, the recent transformation of retail in several urban contexts has also been characterized by the way it is related to specific processes of retail gentrification supported by local urban policies. Retail gentrification is thus emerging as a novel field of research to explain the evolution of retail in some urban areas, such as the ones experiencing excessive tourism. Some retail formats, such as traditional retail markets, have been particularly vulnerable, which is culminating in the gentrification of several of them. The same occurs with the commercial fabric of main city centers most visited by tourists; their transformation is usually linked to gentrification issues and is often the result of public policies that triggered or fostered such an evolution.
We invite authors to submit research that focuses on the transformation of urban retail. This Special Issue is particularly framed on the dialectic retail change vs. urban policies, a subject in which contributions will be of great significance to the scientific literature. Supported by this conceptual framework, we invite studies on topics including, among others, retail change, new forms of governance of shopping districts, retail gentrification (city centers, traditional retail markets, and other retail formats), and retail in tourist cities.
Dr. Pedro Guimarães
Guest Editor
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Keywords
- retailing
- urban retail
- urban policies
- retail change
- gentrification
- traditional retail markets
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