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Foreword
Preface
Part I: New perspectives, modelling and methodology in Regional Science
Chapter 1: The cost of missed EU integration
Chapter 2: On the Existence of an Equilibrium in Models of Local Public Good Use by Cities to Attract the Creative Class
Chapter 3: Canadian Regional Science 2.0
Chapter 4: Dynamic Sustainability: Back to History to Advocate for Small and Medium Size Towns
Chapter 5: Peripheral Urban Areas: Perspectives on Sustainable Regeneration
Chapter 6: Cities and Spatial Data in the New Urban World
A Data-Analytic Exploration
Part II: Society and Culture
Chapter 7: Group-size bias in the measurement of residential sorting
Chapter 8: Entrepreneurial Interest of University Students in a Multicultural Society
Chapter 9: How can small-scale measures of Human Development Index (HDI) be used to study the local potential for sustainable economic growth
Chapter 10: Ceteris Paribus and Fixed Effects in Regional and Cultural Economics
Chapter 11: Horizontal Transmission of Civic Capital and the Emergence of Cooperation: An Agent-Based Modelling Approach
Part III: Tourism and Information
Chapter 12: Peter Nijkamp on the move: crossing borders between regional science and tourism studies
Chapter 13: Revisiting Bruges: Investigating the importance of tourist crowding perception in the visitor experience through computational text analysis
Chapter 14: Exploring User Behavior in Destination Websites: An Application of Web Mining Techniques
Chapter 15: The Role of Visualisation in Spatial Planning: A GIS-based Approach
Part IV: City, Environment and Sustainability
Chapter 16: Towards the implementation of the circular economic model in metropolitan cities: the case of Naples
Chapter 17: Large cities as the cradle of sustainable energy innovation
Chapter 18: Are CO2 emission targets of C40 cities realistic in view of their mayoral powers regarding climate policy
Chapter 19: Economic Impact Analysis of Installing Renewable Energy: A Multiregional Input-Output Model for a small region and the rest of the country
Chapter 20: A performance assessment of Japanese cities by means of Data Envelopment Analysis.

Intro
Foreword: A Lifetime of Leadership in Regional Science
Foreword: For Peter Nijkampś Festschrift Volume
Foreword: Peter: Congratulations and Thank You!
Foreword: Professor Nijkamp, 75 and Going Strong
Foreword: Peter Nijkamp-A Gentleman and a Scholar
Foreword: Peter Nijkamp and Developing World
Foreword: A Tribute to the Modern Flying Dutchman
Preface
Contents
Part I: New Perspectives, Modelling and Methodology in Regional Science
Chapter 1: The Cost of Missed EU Integration
1.1 Introduction
1.2 Scenario Building Methodology and the MASST4 Model

1.3 A Reference Scenario
1.3.1 Structural Changes in EU Economies After the 2008 Crisis
1.3.2 Reference Scenario Assumptions
1.3.3 Reference Scenario Results
1.4 An Integration Scenario
1.4.1 Scenario Assumptions
1.4.2 Scenario Results
1.5 Concluding Remarks
Annex 1
References
Chapter 2: On the Existence of an Equilibrium in Models of Local Public Good Use by Cities to Attract the Creative Class
2.1 Introduction
2.2 The Theoretical Framework
2.3 Preferred Levels of the LPG
2.4 Non-Existence of an Equilibrium
2.5 Existence of an Equilibrium

2.6 Conclusions
References
Chapter 3: Canadian Regional Science 2.0
3.1 Introduction
3.2 Regional Science and Artificial Intelligence
3.2.1 Geo-computation and Artificial Intelligence
3.2.2 Machine Learning for Regional Sciences
3.3 The Opportunity for Canada
3.4 Regional Science 2.0 in Canada
References
Chapter 4: Dynamic Sustainability: Back to History to Advocate for Small- and Medium-Sized Towns
4.1 Introduction: Dynamic Sustainability for SMT
4.2 Methodology: Historical and Critical Approach of SMTs
4.3 The Case Studies
4.3.1 Oeiras, Portugal

4.3.2 Markham, Ontario, Canada
4.3.3 Poznań, Poland
4.4 Discussion
4.5 Conclusion
References
Chapter 5: Peripheral Urban Areas: Perspectives on Sustainable Regeneration
5.1 Introduction
5.2 Planetary Urbanism, Uneven Spatial Development, and Contemporary Peripheries
5.3 Peripheries: A Multifaceted Concept
5.4 Participatory Approaches for Urban Peripheries
5.5 Artificial Intelligence and Participatory Design Theory for Urban Planning
5.6 From the Rehabilitation of Historic Centers to the Urban Regeneration of Peripheries in Italy

5.7 A Place-Based Case Study: The G124 Project
5.8 Concluding Remarks
References
Chapter 6: Cities and Spatial Data in the New Urban World: A Data-Analytic Exploration
6.1 A World of Cities
6.2 The Fuzzy Concept of Cities in the Modern Age
6.3 What is the City?
6.4 Challenging Questions
6.5 Concerns about Urban Statistics
6.6 Data Management and Urban Governance
6.7 Pathways for Urban Data Management
6.8 The Broader Outlook
References
Part II: Society and Culture
Chapter 7: Group-Size Bias in the Measurement of Residential Sorting
7.1 Introduction

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