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@article{ Kuznetsova2018,
 title = {Population Change in the Neighbouring Regions of Russia and the European Union States},
 author = {Kuznetsova, Tatyana Yu.},
 journal = {Baltic Region},
 number = {3},
 pages = {41-57},
 volume = {10},
 year = {2018},
 issn = {2079-8555},
 doi = {https://doi.org/10.5922/2079-8555-2018-3-3},
 abstract = {In this article, I carry out a comparative analysis of population change in the bordering regions of Russia and the European Union. Peripheries of their countries, most of these regions enjoy a more or less favourable demographic situation, which, however, differs from place to place. To attain the aims of the study, I analyse official data from Russian and EU statistical offices and map the results obtained. I identify significant differences between border regions and cities. The most adverse demographic situation is observed in the borderlands of the Baltics, a slightly better one in Poland and Finland. As to Russia's border regions, a population increase is characteristic of Saint Petersburg and the Leningrad and Kaliningrad regions. Yet, a number of cities in the immediate vicinity of the border face a population decline. The demographic situation could be improved by more active transboundary collaborations and by the border serving increasingly as a contact area rather than a barrier.},
 keywords = {EU; Bevölkerungsentwicklung; Southeastern Europe; cross-border cooperation; population density; Grenzgebiet; region; Polen; demographic situation; Russland; demographische Lage; Stadt; Russia; Bevölkerungsdichte; Finnland; Region; EU; grenzüberschreitende Zusammenarbeit; Staatsgrenze; national border; Südosteuropa; population development; Finland; town; border region; Poland; UdSSR-Nachfolgestaat; USSR successor state}}