A wealth of social, economic, historical, political, institutional, and cultural factors have been shown to affect the spatial distribution of resident populations, long-term settlement patterns, and demographic structures on the European continent. However, density-dependent mechanisms regulating population growth remain important drivers of socio-demographic dynamics at both the local and regional levels. In Southern Europe, a paradigmatic region with quite homogeneous population dynamics and urban structures, high within-country variability in the spatial distribution of the resident population and across-country differences in population density outline the distinctive demographic patterns at a regional level. A comparative analysis of ...