AAU Student Projects - visit Aalborg University's student projects portal
A master's thesis from Aalborg University
Book cover


Counter-Urbanization of Fishing Areas in Scotland: Toward a Resilience Concept - Case Studies in Aberdeen City and Peterhead

Author

Term

4. semester

Publication year

2017

Pages

75

Abstract

This thesis examines counter-urbanization in fishing-dependent areas of Northeast Scotland through case studies of Aberdeen and Peterhead, using a resilience lens to assess how governance and industrial shifts reshape cities and surrounding settlements. Building on Aberdeen’s historical transition from fishing to oil—with higher average salaries—and the movement of fishermen and processing firms to Peterhead, it tests two hypotheses: that Aberdeen gains economically by replacing fishing with oil, and that Peterhead benefits from a clustered fishing economy with less governance complexity. Methods included literature review and semi-structured stakeholder interviews selected via purposive sampling, analyzed using an urban resilience framework (Desouza & Flanery, 2013) and a policy analytical approach (Bredgaard et al., 2003). Findings indicate that Aberdeen achieved economic gains but at the cost of social stability, with exposure to oil price volatility, rising unemployment, and limited capacity to recover from future stressors. Contrary to expectations, governance in Peterhead became more complicated as limited financial resources necessitated greater regional cooperation. The study concludes that cities with more diversified industrial bases are better equipped to handle potential stressors, and that balanced development across economic, social, and environmental dimensions is key to building resilient and sustainable communities.

Denne afhandling undersøger modurbanisering i fiskeriafhængige områder i Nordøstskotland gennem casestudier af Aberdeen og Peterhead og anvender et resiliensperspektiv til at vurdere, hvordan styring og industrielle skift påvirker by- og oplandsudvikling. Med udgangspunkt i, at Aberdeen historisk skiftede fra fiskeri til olie med højere gennemsnitslønninger, og at fiskere og fiskeindustrivirksomheder flyttede til Peterhead, testes to hypoteser: at Aberdeen opnår større økonomisk udbytte ved at erstatte fiskeri med olie, og at Peterhead drager fordel af en mere samlet fiskeriøkonomi og mindre styringskompleksitet. Metoderne omfattede litteraturstudier og semistrukturerede interviews med interessenter udvalgt gennem målrettet sampling, analyseret via et urbant resiliensrammeværk (Desouza & Flanery, 2013) og en policyanalytisk tilgang (Bredgaard et al., 2003). Resultaterne viser, at Aberdeen økonomisk har profiteret af omstillingen, men med tab af social stabilitet og sårbarhed over for olieprisernes udsving, herunder stigende arbejdsløshed og begrænset kapacitet til at håndtere fremtidige stressfaktorer. I modsætning til forventningen blev styringen i Peterhead mere kompleks, da begrænsede finansielle ressourcer krævede øget regionalt samarbejde. Afhandlingen peger på, at byer med en mere diversificeret erhvervsstruktur bedre kan imødegå potentielle stressfaktorer, og at en balanceret udvikling på tværs af økonomiske, sociale og miljømæssige hensyn er central for resiliens og bæredygtighed.

[This apstract has been generated with the help of AI directly from the project full text]