Frédéric Durand

Frédéric Durand

Mr.

  • 11, Porte des Sciences, Maison des Sciences Humaines

    L-4366 Esch-sur-Alzette/Belval

    Luxembourg

20082023

Research activity per year

Personal profile

Research summary

Frédéric DURAND holds a Phd in Geography from the University of Paris X-Nanterre (France, under the supervision of Professor Jean-Luc Piermay). The dissertation focused on the border's dynamic and the metropolitan construction of the conurbation of Katowice in Upper Silesia. His first expert contract (2009) still concerned the metropolitan issue in Upper Silesia in the frame of the European program INTERACT. With an international research team, the aim was to compare the regionalization and metropolization processes as well as the economic recovery in France (Valenciennes), Poland (Katowice) and Turkey (Karabück).

During the 2009-2011’s period, Frédéric DURAND made his Post-doctorate at the Luxembourg Institute of Socio-Economic Research (LISER). The research project, called CROSSPLANNING, combined three research domains: border studies, spatial planning and urban studies. Its goal was to compare the planning strategies in a cross-border metropolitan context through the study of two case studies: Luxembourg and the Greater Region and the Eurométropole Lille-Kortrijk-Tournai. This post-doctoral research was part of a European project (METROBORDER) funded by ESPON, supported by Luxembourg's national planning authority (DATer) and conducted by eight research institutions.

Since 2011, three fields of research characterize his scientific profile: border studies, spatial planning and urban studies. Combining them allows to investigate the issue of spatial development at the cross-border scale, in particular within the cross-border metropolitan regions in Europe. At first, he was involved in the MetroNet Project with aim of analyzing the structure of cross-border policy networks in the field of public transport and regional marketing in Basel, Lille, Luxembourg, and Vienna-Bratislava, using social network analysis. Then, he has been able to develop knowledge on specific topics such as cross-border governance, cross-border spatial planning, cross-border integration (EUBORDERSCAPES). His research activities attempt both to contribute to scientific debates by providing empirical analysis and conceptual thinking to better apprehend and understand the socio-spatial phenomena that frame border regions, and to bring some academic knowledge and operational support for decision-makers at local, national and European levels (ODS, Greater Region). His willingness is therefore to provide scientific expertise to identify and better grasp the societal needs and challenges encountered within cross-border areas through academic productions and reports for public authorities as well. Methodologically speaking, he uses a diversified spectrum of quantitative (spatial analysis with GIS, social network analysis…) and qualitative (semi-structured interviews, workshops with stakeholders,…) approaches to address these specific issues.

Today, his research interests are at first to pursue the ongoing reflection on the spatial development of cross-border area by analysing the impacts but also the driving forces and obstacles of cross-border integration on space (functional specialization of space, increase of socio-economic inequalities, re-bordering trends linked with Euroscepticism or populist movements), notably through the CECCUT Jean Monnet Network which investigates the role of culture - in particular though European Capital of Culture - in urban cohesion within cross-border areas, or through the INTERREG project Territorial Development Scheme of the Greater Region whose aim is to design a strategic document at the scale of the cross-border cooperation perimeter. The objective behind these projects is to develop a critical look of the cross-border integration process (which has usually a normative acceptation but which is more complex than the one often described) to grasp the mechanisms of this multidimensional process, which affects more and more often the socio-spatial practices, perceptions and behaviours of populations as well as the location choice of entrepreneurs and citizens. Secondly, Frédéric supervises the setting up of the social observatory of Luxembourg-city in order to better understand the socio-spatial mutations and transformations within the capital, but also to provide effective social planning support for the decision-makers. Thirdly, his interest is also driven by the necessity to bring some responses with regard to the challenges and risks linked with the ecological transition. For this purpose, he is involved in the Luxembourg in Transition procedure (trhough ODS) carried out by the Ministry of Energy and spatial planning and the foundation Braillard, and he is leading the Interreg RECOTTE project, which aims to support local actors in their transition approaches, by bringing out potential cross-border synergies to respond jointly to the climate and energy challenges of the future, and by co-constructing lever projects with local actors in order to carry out joint actions. His idea behind these projects is to develop a new research on the ecological transition at the cross-border level.

Education/Academic qualification

Social and economic geography, PhD, La dynamique des frontières en Europe centrale – Villes et frontières en Haute-Silésie

Award Date: 2 Dec 2008

Unknown

Keywords

  • G Geography (General)

Free keywords

  • border studies
  • urban studies
  • spatial planning

Collaborations and top research areas from the last five years

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