CentropeMAP je cezhraničný geoportál Rakúskej asociácie pre plánovanie východ (PGO), ktorý poskytuje plánovačom, rozhodovateľom, výskumníkom, učiteľom, študentom a všetkým ostatným záujemcom lepší prehľad o regióne Centrope.
CentropeSTATISTICS je výkonné rozšírenie geoportálu, ktoré umožňuje jeho používateľom vytvárať mapy, grafy a animované grafiky zo štatistických údajov na úrovni obcí pomocou niekoľkých kliknutí myšou.
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Chart of the month January
In keeping with the map of the month, the January chart also deals with data on the degree of urbanisation showing the development of the unemployment rate in the Centrope countries broken down into the three categories of urbanisation (cities, towns and suburbs, rural areas). Common to all three categories is the dip in the trend over time caused by the coronavirus pandemic. Otherwise, the trends for all curves are relatively similar. The high unemployment rate in Austrian large cities stands out, which is probably due to the position of Vienna, which has seen disproportionate population growth through immigration in recent years. Data source https://ec.europa.eu/eurostat/databrowser/view/lfst_r_urgau/default/table
Map of the month January
The degree of urbanisation classifies local administrative units (LAUs) as cities, towns and suburbs or rural areas based on a combination of geographical contiguity and population density. This is measured by minimum population thresholds applied to 1 km² population grid cells, where each LAU belongs exclusively to 1 of these 3 classes: cities, towns or suburbs, and rural areas. The most dense urban areas according to this classification are Ceske Budejovice and Brno in the Czech part of Centrope, Bratislava and Trnava in the Slovak part, Vienna in the Austrian part, and Sopron, Szombathely and Gyor in the Hungarian part.Open our geoportal map.centropemap.org to view this map.
Chart of the month December
On the occasion of World Soil Day, which is celebrated annually on 5 December, we are taking a look at the development of soil sealing in the Centrope countries. The chart shows an overall increase of sealed soil by 3.5 % from 2006 to 2018 in the EU-27 average. The development in Austria and Czechia is slightly better. Hungary's soil sealing increase follows the EU avarge, and Slovakia has a significantly higher level of soil sealing increase with almost 5 % from 2006 to 2018. Data source: https://ec.europa.eu/eurostat/databrowser/view/sdg_11_32//default/table
Map of the month December
World Soil Day is an international day of action on 5 December. It was designated by the International Union of Soil Sciences (IUSS) at its 17th World Congress in Bangkok in August 2002. On this occasion, we are taking a look at the development of imperviousness in the Centrope region, comparing data from 2006 and 2018. Slider maps are available for the surroundings of the larger cities in the region:
Open Map for Vienna-Bratislava region Open Map for Győr-Neusiedl/See region Open Map for České Budějovice-Jihlava-Brno region
Chart of the month November
In keeping with the theme for November (World Children's Day), we want to take a look at the proportion of children (defined as those under the age of 18) who are at risk of poverty or social exclusion. The data for the Centrope countries show a similar trend in Austria, the Czech Republic, and Slovakia, which is also in line with the trend in the EU-27 as a whole. In Hungary, the proportion has been significantly higher in the past, levelling off around the EU average in 2018 and even falling below it at the beginning of the 2020s. Data source: https://ec.europa.eu/eurostat/databrowser/view/tepsr_lm412/default/table