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@article{ Brabazon2012,
 title = {Wasted? Managing Decline and Marketing Difference in Third Tier Cities},
 author = {Brabazon, Tara},
 journal = {Journal of Urban and Regional Analysis},
 number = {1},
 pages = {5-33},
 volume = {4},
 year = {2012},
 issn = {2067-4082},
 doi = {https://doi.org/10.37043/JURA.2012.4.1.1},
 abstract = {Third-tier cities are neglected in the research literature. Global and second-tier cities provide the positive, proactive applications of city imaging and creative industries strategies. However, small cities - particularly those who reached their height and notoriety through the industrial revolution - reveal few strategies for stability, let alone growth. This study investigates an unusual third-tier city: Oshawa in Ontario Canada. Known as the home of General Motors, its recent economic and social development has been tethered to the arrival of a new institution of higher education: the University of Ontario Institute of Technology. Yet this article confirms that simply opening a university is not enough to commence regeneration or renewal, particularly if an institution is imposed on unwilling residents. Therefore, an alternative strategy - involving geosocial networking - offers a way for local businesses and organizations to attract customers and provide a digital medication to analogue injustice and decay.},
 keywords = {Stadtentwicklung; urban development; Stadtplanung; urban planning; Sanierung; redevelopment; Stadterneuerung; urban renewal; Kanada; Canada}}