Rethinking Local Development in Small-Scale Mediterranean Cities: Challenges, Gaps and Opportunities
Date
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Access Rights
Abstract
Small-Scale Mediterranean Cities (SSMCs) face unique development challenges-ranging from environmental pressures to heritage vulnerability-yet remain underrepresented in urban research. This study addresses this gap by proposing a context-sensitive analytical framework and applying it to six diverse SSMCs: Pe & ntilde;& iacute;scola (Spain), Mahdia (Tunisia), Marsala (Italy), Rethymno (Greece), Ayval & imath;k (T & uuml;rkiye), and Lefke (Cyprus). These cities were selected for their varied geographies, cultural assets, and planning contexts. Using a qualitative methodology based on policy analysis and secondary data, each case was evaluated across six principles: contextual urbanism, environmental stewardship, heritage integration, economic resilience, participatory governance, and adaptive planning. Findings show strong cultural identity and human-scale design across cases, but also widespread issues like fragmented planning and tourism dependency. Nonetheless, emerging local initiatives in sustainability and civic engagement highlight opportunities for reform. The study offers a unique and transferable framework for guiding inclusive, resilient development in small-scale Mediterranean contexts.










