Abstract
The concept of sustainable development is considered for different spatial levels: regional and local. Sustainable development refers to the stable development of a certain spatial entity: a country, a region, a settlement, balanced in the economic, social and environmental spheres. At the local level, structurally the most complete, complex and integral formation is a separate settlement. The state of its sustainable development should be characterized by a stable increase in the totality of economic, social and environmental indicators. It should be noted that sustainable development at different spatial levels is closely interrelated. For example, development at local levels almost always depends on regional levels, and the development of a certain region includes developing local formations. The impulses of development are transmitted from the local level to the regional through the links of spatial structures. At the same time, the interrelationships and dependencies in the sustainable development of local and regional levels have not been studied fully and constructively enough.
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This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.
About this article
Publication Date
30 September 2024
Article Doi
eBook ISBN
978-1-80296-966-5
Publisher
European Publisher
Volume
4
Print ISBN (optional)
-
Edition Number
1st Edition
Pages
1-1008
Subjects
sustainable development, ecology, economy, technologies, green technologies
Cite this article as:
Baklanov, P. Y., Moshkov, A. V., & Ushakov, E. A. (2024). Sustainable Development At Local And Regional Levels: Interrelations And Limitations. In K. A. Said-Akhmadovich, & A. S. Salamova (Eds.), Modern Trends in Governance and Sustainable Development of Socio-economic Systems: From Regional Development to Global Economic Growth, vol 4. European Proceedings of Multidisciplinary Sciences (pp. 196-204). European Publisher. https://doi.org/10.15405/epms.2024.09.25