Urban geography: a global perspective
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Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
London [u.a.]
Routledge
2005
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Ausgabe: | 2. ed. |
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | XLII, 686 S. Ill., graph. Darst., Kt. |
ISBN: | 0415343054 0415343062 9780415343053 9780415343060 |
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100 | 1 | |a Pacione, Michael |d 1947- |e Verfasser |0 (DE-588)132778971 |4 aut | |
245 | 1 | 0 | |a Urban geography |b a global perspective |c Michael Pacione |
250 | |a 2. ed. | ||
264 | 1 | |a London [u.a.] |b Routledge |c 2005 | |
300 | |a XLII, 686 S. |b Ill., graph. Darst., Kt. | ||
336 | |b txt |2 rdacontent | ||
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650 | 4 | |a Géographie urbaine | |
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Datensatz im Suchindex
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adam_text | Contents
List of illustrations xv
List of tables xxi
List of boxes xxv
Preface to the second edition xxx
Acknowledgements xxxi
Copyright acknowledgements xxxii
Introduction xxxvi
PART ONE: THE STUDY OF URBAN GEOGRAPHY 1
CJiaptej^L.^LLthaiL4i£asi3phyzJiwn^Jnh^±aJ£u^ __ _i Introduction
Global trigger factors
Globalisation
Glocalisation: the localisation of the global
The question of space and scale
Local and historical contingency
Processes of urban change
Urban outcomes
Daily life in the global village
Why study urban geography?
Chapter 2 Concepts and theory in urban geography . 2fl
Introduction
The scope of urban geography
Defining the urban
The significance of space and place
The value of the urban dimension
A brief history of urban geography
In search of common ground
Levels of analysis in urban geography
CONTENTS
PART TWO: AN URBANISING WORLD 37
Chapter 3 The origins and growth of cities 39
Introduction
Preconditions for urban growth
Theories of urban origins
Early urban hearths
The spread of urbanism
Urban revival in Western Europe
The medieval town
The preconditions for industrial urbanism
Early modern urbanism
The form of the industrial city
Residential segregation
Housing the poor
The other side of the coin
The origins of urban USA
The westward progress of urbanism
Post industrial urbanism
The quartering of urban space
The post industrial/postmodern city
CJLapierA^ TJiejglQhaLcnnieid^ 71 Introduction
The urbanisation of the globe
The changing distribution of the world s urban population
The causes of urban growth
Settlement size
Megacities and million cities
Urbanisation and economic growth
The urbanisation cycle
A stages of urban development model
Types of urbanised regions
Chapter 5 Regional perspectives on urbanisation and urban change 96
Introduction
North America
Latin America and the Caribbean
Western Europe
East and Central Europe
Asia and the Pacific
Africa
Chapter 6 National urban systems 122
Introduction
National urban systems and the outside world
Types of places in the national urban system
Theories of the urban system
CONTENTS
PART THREE: URBAN STRUCTURE AND LAND USE IN THE WESTERN CITY 137
Chapter 7 Land use in the city 139
Introduction
Urban morphogenesis
Ecological models of the city
Modifications of the classical urban models
A political economy perspective
Major actors in the production of the built environment
Growth coalitions
The central business district
Urban architecture
Architecture and urban meaning
The social construction of the urban landscape
Chapters Urban planning and policy.. . 166
Introduction
The roots of urban planning
Post war urban planning in the UK
Urban policy in the UK
Urban planning in the USA
Planning the socialist city
Socialist urban form
Towards planning for sustainable urban development
Chapter 9 New towns 190
Introduction
The British New Towns
New towns in Europe
New towns in the Third World
New communities in the USA
Chapter. 10 Residential mobility and neighbourhood change 203
Introduction
Why people move
The decision to move
The search for a new home
Housing markets
Neighbourhood change
Housing abandonment
Gentrification
Chapter 11 Housing problems and housing policy 220
Introduction
Trends in housing tenure in the UK
Public housing in the USA
Housing affordability
Homelessness
Strategies to improve housing quality
Alternative housing strategies
CONTENTS
Chapter 12Urban retailing ._ 241
Introduction
Shopertainment
Spaces and places of consumption
The spatial switching of retail capital
Urban retail structure
The changing structure of urban retailing
The growth of suburban shopping centres in North America
The impact of retail decentralisation on the
US CBD
Concentration versus decentralisation in Britain
Disadvantaged consumers
Chapter.13. Urban transportation 264
Introduction
Patterns of travel demand
The urban transport problem
Responses to the urban transport problem
Transport and sustainable urban development
PART FOUR: LIVING IN THE CITY: ECONOMY, SOCIETY AND POLITICS IN
THE WESTERN CITY 283
Chapter 14 The economy of cities 285
Introduction
The world/global economy
The world economy in the post war era
Transnational corporations and the state in the global economy
New production systems and new industrial spaces
Deindustrialisation and tertiarisation
The nature of work and the division of labour
Unemployment
Informalisation
Urban change within the global economy
The world city
Transnational urban systems
The post war restructuring of the UK space economy
Chapter 15 Poverty and deprivation in the Western city . 30S
Introduction
Theories of deprivation
The nature of deprivation
The underclass
Dimensions of multiple deprivation
Financial exclusion
The geography of deprivation
The inner city problem
The outer city problem
Deprivation and the area based approach
CONTENTS
Cbapl£Lj.e^NAlimjaLAa±lacalj spjws£s^ 330
Introduction
Urban regeneration in the U K from the top down
Urban policy in the USA
Public—private partnerships
Property led regeneration
Cultural industries and urban reconstruction
Urban tourism and downtown redevelopment
The market led approach to urban development
Urban regeneration from the bottom up
The community/social economy
The black economy
Chaptei...l2^^Ca.llecthL£^cansijmpliQiL.an^ 35.2
Introduction
Welfare needs and provision
The changing nature of the welfare state
The theory of public goods
Theories of public service provision
Efficiency, equity and equality in public service provision
The suburban exploitation thesis
Deinstitutionalisation
Educational services in the city
Social justice and welfare
Chapter:.1SI Residential differentiation andcommunities in the city 368
Introduction
The identification of residential areas
Sense of place
Difference and identity in the city
The urban community
The bases of residential segregation
Chapter 19 Urban liveability 398
Introduction
Rating places
Theories of urban impact
Environmental stressors
Site design and social behaviour
Residential satisfaction
Urban sub areas
Women in the city
Elderly people in the city
Children in the city
Disabled people in the city
Towards the liveable city
Chapter ZO^ Power, politics and urban governance 420
Introduction
The role of local government
Constraints on local government
CONTENTS
The spatial structure of local government
City growth, annexation and incorporation in the USA
Negative consequences of fragmented government
The politics of secession
Metropolitan government
Power in the city
PART FIVE: URBAN GEOGRAPHY IN THE THIRD WORLD 449
Chapter 21 Third World urbanisation within a global urban system 4.51
Introduction
Urbanisation in the First and Third Worlds
Theories of urbanisation and development
Third World urbanisation in historical context
Stages of colonial urbanisation
Peripheral urbanisation
Exo urbanisation
Urbanisation by implosion
Chapter 22 The internal structure of Third World cities 468 Introduction
Cities of Latin America
Africa s cities
Cities of the Middle East and North Africa
The city in South Asia
The South East Asian city
The Chinese city
Chapter 23 Rural urban migration in the Third World 485 Introduction
Why people move
Structural determinants of migration
Who migrates?
Migration strategies
The policy response
Chapter 24 Urban economy and employment in the Third World 501
Introduction
The evolution of the Third World urban economy
The structure of the urban economy
The nature of lower circuit activity
Employment relations in the Third World urban economy
Labour market structure
Job access
Unemployment, underemployment and misemployment
Women in the labour force
Child labour
The household economy and coping strategies
Chapter 25 Housing the Third World urban poor 5.1.6 Introduction
The main sources of housing for the urban poor
Housing submarkets and the urban poor
CONTENTS
Squatter settlements
Security of tenure
Housing finance
Urban land markets and the poor
Informal settlements: generative or parasitic?
Government housing policy
Chapter 26 Environmental problems in Third Worldcities 546
Introduction
The domestic environment
The workplace environment
The neighbourhood environment
The city environment
The city s ecological footprint
Chapter 27 Health in the Third World City 562
Introduction
The epidemiological transition
Factors determining health status
An urban penalty?
Intra urban variations in health
Diseases of the urban poor
Primary health care and the urban poor
Malnutrition
Combating urban malnutrition
Integrated approaches to primary health care
Chapter 28 Traffic and transport in the Third World city 577
Introduction
Traffic problems
Transport and Third World urban form
Public transport
Non motorised transport
Rail based transit systems
Urban transport strategies in the Third World
Chapter 29 ^Poveriyf power and politics in the Third World city 587
Introduction
The social relations of power
Partiality, inequality and the soft state
The bases of social power
Patron client relations
Urban social movements
Community based organisations
Christian base communities
Urban NGOs in the Third World
Community participation in Third World urban governance
Globalisation and social justice
CONTENTS
PART SIX: PROSPECTIVE: THE FUTURE OF THE CITY CITIES OF THE FUTURE 603
Chapter 30 The future of the city cities.of the future 605 Introduction
Sustainable urban development
Urban metabolism
Towards the city of the future
The study of urban geography
Notes 627
Glossary 666
Index 677
111 ustrations
COLOUR PLATES
Plates 1 8 between pages 138 and 139; Plates 9 16 between pages 450 and 451.
1 The ancient city: Thebes
2 The fantasy city: Las Vegas
3 The post industrial city: Glasgow
4 The modern industrial city: Pusan, South Korea
5 The global city: Tokyo
6 The mobile city: San Diego
7 The informal city: Bombay
8 The congested city: Hong Kong
9 The squatter city: Rio de Janeiro
10 The post colonial city: Singapore
11 The contested city: Belfast
12 The multicultural city: London
13 The emblematic city: Sydney
14 The unregulated city: Rome
15 The defensive city: M#w York
16 The emerging global city: Shanghai
BLACK AND WHITE PLATES
1.1 Marks and Spencer s store in Hong Kong 10
2.1 Waterfront living in Manta, Ecuador... and St Katharine s
Dock, London 26
3.1 The pyramid at Chichen Itza, Mexico 44
3.2 The Piazza San Pietro, Rome 50
3.3 Terraced housing in the Elswick district of Newcastle upon Tyne 56
3.4 The social polarisation of the postmodern city, Denver CO 66
4.1 The exploding postmodern metropolis of Los Angeles CA 91
5.1 The Banco Popular in Harlem, New York City 99
ILLUSTRATIONS
5.2 The ancient Islamic city and twentieth century new town,
Kano, Nigeria 119
7.1 High rise and high status in San Francisco CA 142
7.2 Late modern architecture in Phoenix AZ 161
8.1 Canary Wharf tower in London 179
8.2 Public housing in the socialist city: Moscow 185
9.1 A private retirement community, Sun City Center FL 200
10.1 Moving home in the USA 204
10.2 Gentrification on Butler s Wharf, London 213
11.1 Public housing in a British city: Glasgow 225
11.2 Council tower blocks and housing association tenements,
Glasgow 235
12.1 The Rialto bridge, Venice and Las Vegas NV 242
12.2 A combined retail recreational experience, Las Vegas NV 245
12.3 The MetroCentre, Gateshead, one of Europe s largest covered
malls 258
13.1 Rush hour on the Chuo line, Tokyo 269
13.2 The end of the road for an urban freeway, San Francisco CA 270
14.1 Commuters and tourists on Westminster Bridge, London 292
14.2 Deindustrialisation on the River Clyde, Glasgow 300
15.1 The polarised city: London 313
15.2 A burnt out car by local authority flats in Possilpark, Glasgow 326
16.1 The redevelopment of Baltimore s Harborplace 338
16.2 Culture based urban redevelopment, Gastown, Vancouver 340
17.1 Protest at environmental pollution, New Orleans LA 363
18.1 An exclusive guard gated community in Nevada 381
18.2 Bangladeshis in Tower Hamlets, London 395
19.1 A protected public space on Manhattan Island, New York City 414
20.1 Low density residential zoning, Cherry Hills, Denver CO 432
20.2 Social commentary outside the US Mint in Denver CO 443
21.1 Sir Stamford Raffles and a symbol of post industrial society,
Singapore 458
21.2 The Burj al Arab hotel, Dubai 463
22.1 Housing in the indigenous part of Kano, Nigeria 473
22.2 The King Abdullah Mosque prominent in the Islamic city of
Amman, Jordan 476
23.1 Kejeta bus station, Kumasi, Ghana, a point of entry for rural
urban migrants 489
23.2 Social polarisation in Beijing: the housing of migrant workers
and of middle class suburban dwellers 497
24.1 A Mexican girl prepares cactus leaves for sale from her
doorstep 504
24.2 A worker in a female labour intensive workshop in Beijing 509
25.1 Large scale public housing in Singapore 518
25.2 Homeless people shelter in drainpipes, Calcutta 519
25.3 Self constructed squatters housing, Sao Paulo 526
26.1 Water collection for domestic use, a daily task in Nairobi 549
26.2 Apartment blocks shrouded in smog, central Beijing 554
26.3 Flooding in Jakarta 557
27.1 Street vendors in Hong Kong 568
28.1 Paratransit in Bangkok 581
28.2 Pedal power: the chief form of personal transport in China 583
ILLUSTRATIONS
FIGURES
1.1 Triggers, processes and outcomes in urban geography 4
2.1 The nature of urban geography 21
3.1 Early urban hearths 42
3.2 The Fertile Crescent and ancient cities of the Middle East 43
3.3 Typical form of a Roman imperial settlement and a
generalised example from Roman Britain 45
3.4 The urban structure of medieval Lubeck 49
3.5 Burgess s model of the industrial city 53
3.6 The processes of residential sorting by class in the nineteenth
centui y British city 54
3.7 Layout of back to back housing in Manchester 57
4.1 The urban world in 1890 72
4.2 The urban world in 1950 72
4.3 The urban world in 1990 73
4.4 The urban world by 2025 73
4.5 The urban population of world regions, 1970,1994 and 2025 74
4.6 Average annual rate of urban population growth, 1990 5 76
4.7 Generalised stages of differential urbanisation 82
4.8 The stages of urban development model 83
4.9 Megalopolises of the USA 92
4.10 The megalopolitan trend in Western Europe 93
4.11 Doxiadis s concept of ecumenopolis 94
5.1 Major metropolitan areas in North America 98
5.2 Migration flows for selected US immigrant magnet
metropolitan areas 101
5.3 Major urban centres in Latin America and the Caribbean 104
5.4 Major urban centres in Western Europe 108
5.5 Major urban centres in Eastern and Central Europe 110
5.6 Major urban centres in Asia 113
5.7 Major urban centres in Africa 118
6.1 Deriving the hexagonal pattern of market areas for central
places 128
6.2 Hierarchical and spatial arrangement of central places 129
6.3 The changing settlement pattern of East Flevoland 131
6.4 Bylund s model of settlement diffusion 132
6.5 Vance s mercantile model of urban development 134
7.1 The fringe belts of Newcastle upon Tyne 140
7.2 Burgess s concentric zone model of urban land use, applied to
Chicago 142
7.3 Hoyt s sector model of urban land use, and its application in
Sunderland 144
7.4 Harris and Ullman s multiple nuclei model of urban land
use 145
7.5 Mann s model of a typical medium size British city 147
7.6 Kearsley s modified Burgess model of urban land use 148
7.7 Vance s urban realms model 149
7.8 White s model of the twenty first century city 149
7.9 Harvey s model of the circulation of capital 151
7.10 Principal actors in the production of the built environment 155
8.1 Plan of the model settlement of Bournville 170
ILLUSTRATIONS
8.2 Structure of Howard s garden city 171
8.3 Residential density profiles in selected European cities 185
9.1 The Abercrombie plan for Greater London, 1944 191
9.2 The British New Towns 191
9.3 Proposed private sector residential communities in South
East England 194
9.4 Evolution of new communities in the USA 197
9.5 Locations of major new communities in the USA 198
10.1 Reasons for household relocation 203
10.2 A value expectancy model of migration decision making 205
10.3 A stress model of the residential location decision
process 206
10.4 Downs continuum of neighbourhood change 211
10.5 The concept of the rent gap 215
11.1 Public housing policy in the USA 228
11.2 Types of accommodation in a post industrial society 231
12.1 Berry s classification of urban retail locations 244
12.2 A typology of the contemporary urban retail system 245
12.3 Plan of the Mall of America, Bloomington M N 250
12.4 Retail centres in San Antonio TX 251
12.5 New shopping centre construction starts in the USA 252
12.6 Central area decline and suburban retail growth in the US
Midwest, 1958 63 252
12.7 Stages in the evolution of town centre shopping schemes in
the UK 255
12.8 British shopping centre development: total floor space opened
each year, 1965 93 257
12.9 The layout of out of town regional shopping centres in the
UK: the MetroCentre, Gateshead and the Meadowhall
Centre, Sheffield 260
12.10 Major out of town shopping centres open or under
development in the UK 261
13.1 A typology of commuting flows 267
13.2 Dimensions of the urban transport problem 267
13.3 The relationship between car ownership and bus
ridership 271
13.4 Models of the relationship between transport policy and
urban structure 276
13.5 The mass rapid transit system and concentrated
decentralisation in Singapore 278
13.6 Plan of a transit oriented community 279
15.1 Anatomy of multiple deprivation 310
15.2 A cumulative causation model of the underclass phenomenon
in US cities 313
15.3 Incidence of all offences and property offences in England
and Wales, 1950 92 314
15.4 Male mortality rates by social class and age group in England
and Wales, 1976 81 315
15.5 Major sources of poverty among ethnic minorities 316
15.6 Deprived households as a percentage of all households in UK
local authority districts 320
15.7 The geography of deprivation in London 321
ILLUSTRATIONS
15.8 Share of population living in underclass neighbourhoods and
extreme poverty neighbourhoods, by region, ethnic
distribution and urban location 324
15.9 The geography of deprivation in Glasgow 327
16.1 Major urban policy initiatives in the UK 331
16.2 The geography of urban policy in the UK 333
16.3 Major federal urban programmes in the USA 335
16.4 A general model of economic activity within a developed
economy 347
17.1 Determining whether a social process is an element of
collective consumption 352
17.2 The hypothetical time space prism of a suburban housewife 359
17.3 The daily time space prism of a homeless woman on skid row,
Los Angeles CA 360
18.1 The Gold Coast and the slum in Chicago, 1929 369
18.2 The method of social area analysis 370
18.3 Social areas in the San Francisco Bay region, 1950 371
18.4 The method of factorial ecology 372
18.5 The components of urban ecological structure 374
18.6 The relationship between life cycle and residential mobility 379
18.7 A model of the assimilation process 385
18.8 Residential spatial outcomes of ethnic segregation congregation 387
18.9 Residential shifts of Jewish population in Cincinnati OH 388
18.10 Distribution of Wolverhampton s population born in the New
Commonwealth or Pakistan 389
18.11 African American residential expansion in Atlanta GA,
1950 90 390
18.12 Spatial process of African American suburbanisation in the
US city 391
18.13 Distribution of immigrant ethnic populations in London 394
19.1 A stress model of urban impact 401
19.2 The elements of a legible city and their application to the
urban form of Boston MA 409
19.3 The relationship between crime and environmental
characteristics, according to Newman 412
20.1 Forms of urban local government 423
20.2 Spatial structure of local government in the UK 426
20.3 Political geography of the Denver Standard
Metropolitan Statistical Area: municipalities of the Denver
urban area and land use zoning in Cherry Hills 431
20.4 Forms of inter jurisdictional co operation: the Metro Denver
Network and the Louisville Jefferson County Compact 436
20.5 Hypothetical example of malapportionment 440
20.6 Gerrymandering in a proposed reapportionment of electoral
district boundaries in Philadelphia PA 440
20.7 Arnstein s ladder of citizen participation 441
21.1 Frank s model of dependent development, illustrated with
reference to the USA and Brazil 455
21.2 Wailerstein s world systems model 456
22.1 A model of the Latin American city 469
22.2 A model of Latin American urban land use 470
22.3 A general model of the African city 471
ILLUSTRATIONS
22.4 The pre apartheid segregated city 473
22.5 The apartheid city 474
22.6 Structure of the Islamic city 474
22.7 A model of the colonial based city in South Asia 477
22.8 A model of the bazaar based city in South Asia 478
22.9 A model of the South East Asian city 479
22.10 A model of the Indonesian city 480
22.11 A model of the contemporary Chinese city 483
23.1 Changing roles of development related factors in migration 488
23.2 The migration decision process 493
24.1 The structure of the Third World urban economy 502
24.2 Continuum of employment relationships in the Third World
urban economy 506
24.3 The household economy in the Third World city 513
25.1 Major sources of housing for the Third World urban poor 518
25.2 Migration patterns among low income neighbourhoods in the
Third World city 523
25.3 Turner s typology of squatters 528
25.4 The Klong Toey land sharing project in Bangkok 540
26.1 Health hazards of garbage picking 553
27.1 An integrated approach to community health in Addis Ababa,
Ethiopia 571
28.1 The relationship between urban form and dominant mode of
transport 579
28.2 A protocol for assessing transport options 585
29.1 Relations of power within a society 588
29.2 The bases of social power 590
30.1 Goals of sustainable development 606
30.2 Major dimensions of urban sustainability 608
30.3 The relationship between urban population density and
gasoline consumption 615
30.4 Concentrated and decentralised concentrated forms of urban
development 616
30.5 Remodelling the automobile dependent city 617
30.6 Le Corbusier s ideal city: la ville radieuse 618
30.7 Soleri s three dimensional city: Babel II D 619
30.8 Three urban configurations 620
Tables
1.1 Themes and questions in urban geography 13
2.1 Definitions of urban areas in the USA and UK 23
2.2 The expanding scope of urban geography 27
2.3 Analytical value of different theoretical perspectives in urban
geography 33
3.1 The fastest growing US cities and biggest population losers,
1980 90 64
4.1 Urban population and percentage urban in more developed
and less developed regions, 1970,1994 and 2025 74
4.2 Average annual rate of change of urban population,
1965 70,1990 5 and 2020 5 76
4.3 Urban population, number of cities and percentage of urban
population by city size class: world, more developed regions
and less developed regions 77
4.4 The fifteen largest urban agglomerations, ranked by
population size, 1950, 2000 and 2015 78
4.5 Number of megacities, 1970,1994, 2000 and 2015 80
4.6 Regional distribution of the world s population in million
cities and the location of the world s largest 100 cities 80
4.7 Stages of development of a daily urban system 84
4.8 Great Britain: population change, 1951 91, by functional
region zone 84
4.9 Types of population change in metropolitan areas of the USA,
1980 90 and 1990 6 85
4.10 City and downtown population changes in the USA, 1990 2000 86
4.11 Changing population and employment distributions in the
USA, 1950 2000 87
4.12 Population change in US central cities, 1960 2000 89
4.13 Alternative interpretations of the suburbanisation process 90
5.1 Ranking of US metropolitan areas by population, 2000 98
5.2 Net domestic migration and movers from abroad,
1995 2000, for the largest US metropolitan areas 100
TABLES
5.3 Latin America: urban populations for 1990 and 2001 and
urban change since 1950 102
5.4 Urban populations and levels of urbanisation for all West
European countries with 1 million or more inhabitants 106
5.5 Functional types of cities in Western Europe 107
5.6 Urban population in Eastern Europe in 1992 and 2001, and
urban change since the 1930s 110
5.7 Levels of urbanisation of the former Soviet republics 1959,
1989 and 2001 111
5.8 Population and urban change, 1950 2001, in Asian countries
with 10 million or more inhabitants 112
5.9 Urban population change in African countries with 1 million
or more inhabitants, 1950,1990 and 2001 117
6.1 Classification of city systems based on levels of closure and
interdependence 123
6.2 Classification of British towns 124
6.3 Classification of US metropolitan areas by type and size 125
6.4 US city types 126
6.5 Characteristics of central places in southern Germany 128
7.1 Assumptions and principles of the concentric zone model of
urban land use 142
8.1 The main goals of planning 167
8.2 Planned settlements in eighteenth and nineteenth century
Britain 169
8.3 Major reports and legislation leading to the 1947 planning
system in the U K 173
8.4 Main phases in British post war urban policy 176
8.5 Main advantages and disadvantages of selected growth
management techniques 182
10.1 Ten life cycle events related to residential adjustment or
relocation 204
10.2 Housing groups in the London borough of Southwark 208
10.3 Summary of neighbourhood life cycles 210
10.4 Factors underlying neighbourhood decline and
revitalisation 212
10.5 Demand side and supply side factors underlying
neighbourhood revitalisation 216
11.1 Housing tenure and dwelling stock in Great Britain, 1914 2001 221
11.2 UK dwelling completions by tenure, 1946 2001 222
11.3 US public housing completions, 1939 91 229
12.1 Hierarchy of planned shopping centres 246
12.2 Changes in shopping centre land values in the Chicago
metropolitan area 254
12.3 The impact of town centre shopping schemes in Britain 256
12.4 Location and size of enclosed centres of over 500,000 ft2 in
Britain 259
13.1 The relationship between transport and urban form in
Western cities 264
13.2 Changing mode of journey to work in the USA, 1990 2000 266
13.3 Number of vehicles, Great Britain, 1950 2000 266
13.4 Proportion of households with regular use of a car, Great
Britain, 1951 2000 266
TABLES
13.5 Changes in modal split of work trips in the restricted zone,
Singapore 273
13.6 Types of alternative work schedules 275
14.1 The post war vFordist expansionary regime of the late 1940s
to early 1970s 290
14.2 The post Fordist regime of flexible accumulation from the
mid 1970s to the present 291
14.3 Structure of world output, 1960 90 291
14.4 World output by sector and major region, 2000 292
14.5 Roster of world cities 298
14.6 Employment change by sector in major British cities, 1981 91 304
14.7 Employment structure of major British cities, 2001 305
15.1 The geography of poverty in the USA 309
15.2 Principal models of urban deprivation 309
15.3 The thirty four US cities past the point of no return 322
15.4 Demographic profile of south central Los Angeles, 1990 323
15.5 A typology of explanations of inner city decline 323
15.6 Suburbanisation of inner city problems in the USA, 1980 90 328
16.1 Problems and opportunities of culture led regeneration 341
17.1 Pressures on the welfare state 354
17.2 Forms of restructuring in public sector service provision 355
18.1 Factorial ecology of Clydeside: factor structures and loadings 372
18.2 Measurement of neighbourhood cohesion in Glasgow 378
18.3 Forms of social disorganisation in the slum 380
18.4 Ethnic composition of central city and non central city
populations in the USA, 1990 and 2000 391
18.5 Ethnic composition of the British population, 2001 392
19.1 The top ten places to live in the USA, according to Money
Magazine, 1997 399
20.1 Types of metropolitan government 422
20.2 Number of local governments in the USA, 1942 2002 427
20.3 Number of municipalities in selected US counties, 1920 70 429
20.4 Metropolitan restructuring processes in the USA 438
20.5 Characteristics of successful grass roots groups 446
21.1 Stages of colonial urbanisation in Asia 457
23.1 Principal reasons for migration from rural North East
Thailand 486
23.2 The demographic and mobility transitions among modernising
populations 487
23.3 Average annual rates of rural out migration in Latin America 490
23.4 Principal policy responses to rural urban migration in the
Third World 495
24.1 The nature of the two circuits in the Third World urban economy 503
24.2 Types of informally organised market oriented activities in
the Third World urban economy 505
25.1 Indicators of housing quality in high and low income countries 516
25.2 Types of rental housing used by lower income groups in many
Third World cities 520
25.3 Examples of owner occupation housing used by low income
groups in many Third World cities 524
25.4 Proportion of city population in extra legal housing in various
Third World cities 531
TABLES
25.5 Peincipal means by which people obtain land for housing in
Third World cities 531
25.6 Different attitudes by governments to housing problems in
cities and different policy responses 535
25.7 Positive and negative features of illegal land subdivision for
low income housing 542
26.1 Major environmental problems in Third World cities 547
26.2 Household environmental conditions in selected cities 550
27.1 Government community actions to combat health risks in
Third World cities 572
28.1 Number of passenger cars per thousand inhabitants in
selected countries 577
30.1 The multiple goals of sustainable development as applied to
cities 609
30.2 The metabolism of Greater London 610
Boxes
1.1 Principal characteristics of globalisation 9
2.1 The assumptions of positivism 28
3.1 Childe s ten characteristics of an urban civilisation 40
3.2 Preconditions for pre industrial urban growth 40
3.3 UroftheChaldees 43
3.4 A model of the pre industrial city 46
3.5 Plan of Venta Silurum (Caerwent) 47
3.6 The merchant class and urban growth in medieval Europe 48
3.7 The circular and cumulative model of urban growth 52
3.8 Socio spatial segregation in nineteenth century Liverpool 55
3.9 The slum district of Little Ireland in Manchester, 1849 57
3.10 Living conditions in the tenement slums of mid nineteenth
century Glasgow 58
3.11 Tenement life in Glasgow 60
3.12 Philadelphia: a seventeenth century planned town 61
3.13 The township and range system of land division 62
3.14 New York: the urban explosion 63
3.15 Los Angeles: the archetypal postmodern metropolis 68
4.1 The demographic transition model 75
4.2 Tokyo: global megacity 79
4.3 Overurbanisation 81
4.4 The urbanisation curve 82
4.5 The law of the primate city 83
4.6 Edge City, USA: Tyson s Corner VA 88
4.7 The changing ethnic composition of US central cities 89
5.1 Urban restructuring and the effect of the Mexico USA border 105
5.2 The economic and urban development of Shanghai 114
5.3 Australasian cities 115
5.4 Underurbanisation in China 118
5.5 The deteriorating infrastructure of African cities 119
5.6 Informal employment in African cities 120
6.1 Urban systems at the intra national scale 122
BOXES
6.2 Assumptions underlying Christaller s central place theory 127
6.3 The missing middle in the Third World urban hierarchy 134
7.1 Land ownership and the development of the street pattern
in eighteenth century Glasgow 141
7.2 Burgess s concentric zone model of urban land use 143
7.3 The trade off model of urban land use 146
7.4 The over accumulation crisis and post war suburbanisation
in the USA 152
7.5 Major agents and motives in the capitalist land
development process 154
7.6 Housing submarkets in Baltimore MD 157
7.7 Externalities 159
7.8 BIDs to privatise public space in New York City 163
8.1 The nature of urban policy 167
8.2 The value of planning 168
8.3 Urban growth management: the Dutch approach 173
8.4 Incentive zoning in Seattle 174
8.5 Land use conflict in the green belt 175
8.6 Common forms of land use zoning in the USA 181
8.7 Major principles of smart growth 182
8.8 Marxist Leninist principles underlying the Soviet socialist city 183
8.9 The Soviet micro region 184
9.1 Milton Keynes New Town 193
9.2 Where will the new houses go? 195
9.3 The new towns of the Paris region 196
9.4 New urbanism: principles of neighbourhood development 200
9.5 Columbia MD 200
10.1 The concept of housing class 207
10.2 The arbitrage model of neighbourhood racial transition 209
10.3 Housing abandonment in St Louis MO 211
10.4 Geography and gentrification in London: a tale of two postcodes 214
11.1 Rent controls 224
11.2 The Hope VI programme 230
11.3 Sleeping rough in Toronto 232
11.4 Homeless in Hollywood 233
12.1 The Minneapolis skywalk system 247
12.2 The anatomy of the shopping mall 250
12.3 Power centres in the USA 251
12.4 The West Edmonton Mall, Edmonton, Alberta 251
12.5 The nature of commercial blight 253
12.6 The polarisation of retail provision in central Chicago 255
12.7 Retail decentralisation in the UK 260
13.1 Major eras of metropolitan growth and transport
development in the USA 265
13.2 Accessibility and mobility 267
13.3 Public transport in Curitiba, Brazil 271
13.4 The political feasibility of high occupancy vehicle lanes 274
13.5 A transit oriented community: Tama new town, Japan 278
13.6 Pleasant Hill CA: transit village 279
14.1 The advent of megabyte money 286
14.2 A typology of technopoles 289
14.3 Offshoring: a new international division of labour 293
BOXES
14.4 Unemployment on the Kirkby estate in Liverpool 295
14.5 World city characteristics 296
14.6 London as a world city 299
14.7 Local economic restructuring in Glasgow 302
14.8 Restructuring the Pennsylvanian economy 303
15.1 Life on a low income 312
15.2 Food poverty in the UK 317
15.3 The Lower East Side People s Federal Credit Union 318
15.4 The South Shore Community Development Bank 319
15.5 Grameen borrowing circles in Chicago 319
15.6 In the depths of the inner city 325
16.1 The London Docklands Development Corporation: area,
powers and objectives 334
16.2 Detroit s empowerment zone plan 336
16.3 Creating a better business climate in Houston TX 337
16.4 A tale of two Baltimores 339
16.5 City marketing, festivals and urban spectacle 343
16.6 The West Midlands Enterprise Board 344
16.7 Urban regeneration in Cleveland OH 345
16.8 Linkage policy in San Francisco CA 346
16.9 The Watts Labor and Community Action Committee 348
16.10 The anatomy of a LETS: the West Glasgow Local
Exchange Trading System 349
16.11 The black economy in urban Britain 350
17.1 The importance of collective consumption 353
17.2 Welfare to work 354
17.3 Public choice theory 357
17.4 Human needs and wants 358
17.5 Environmental racism 362
17.6 Differential social access to utility services 362
18.1 You are where you live 373
18.2 Territoriality 374
18.3 Changes in the scale of society 377
18.4 Gated communities 382
18.5 Queer spaces 383
18.6 Ethnicity and race 383
18.7 Measuring segregation 384
18.8 The assimilation of migrant groups 385
18.9 Two models of ethnic segregation 386
18.10 Voluntary apartheid in Detroit 387
18.11 The tipping point 390
19.1 The 1995 Kobe earthquake and its aftermath 403
19.2 Flood plain development in England 406
19.3 Some principles for designing legible cities 410
19.4 Newman s design guidelines for defensible space 411
19.5 The concept of user generated design 413
19.6 Danger areas on a Glasgow housing estate 415
20.1 The California tax revolt 424
20.2 Segregated education 428
20.3 The defensive incorporation of Lathrup Village MI 429
20.4 Legal challenges to exclusionary zoning 430
20.5 The central city suburban fiscal debate in the Glasgow region 433
BOXES
20.6 Strategies to resolve political fragmentation 434
20.7 Metropolitanism versus municipalism 437
20.8 The Daley machine in Chicago, 1955 76 439
20.9 The community charge: a short lived tax 445
20.10 The New Jersey Tenants Organization 446
21.1 Defining the Third World 452
21.2 Rostow s stages of economic growth 454
21.3 Determinants of colonial urban form 457
21.4 Delhi: the evolution of an imperial city 460
21.5 Urban primacy in the Third World 462
21.6 Jabotabek: an extended metropolitan region 464
21.7 Exo urbanisation in the Pearl River delta region 465
22.1 Structure of the Latin American city: the case of Mexico City 472
22.2 Towards the post apartheid city 475
22.3 Cairo, Egypt 476
22.4 Mumbai, India 478
22.5 The kampungs of Jakarta, Indonesia 481
22.6 Private cities in Greater Jakarta 482
23.1 Not so bright lights: a migrant s view of Bombay 491
23.2 China s urban floating population 496
23.3 Migration controls in Jakarta, Indonesia 496
23.4 Promoting secondary city growth in South Korea 498
24.1 Linkages between the two circuits of the Third World
urban economy 504
24.2 Daily activity pattern of a part time domestic worker in
Dhaka, Bangladesh 507
24.3 Waste picking as a survival strategy in Bangalore, India 508
24.4 Gender, work and human development in Manila, Philippines 510
24.5 Sweatshop labour in a Bangladeshi clothing factory 511
24.6 Child labour in Pakistan 512
25.1 Pavement dwellers in Bombay, India 517
25.2 Factors underlying choice of residential location among
low income groups in Abidjan, Cote d lvoire 522
25.3 The development of San Martin, Buenos Aires, Argentina 527
25.4 The development of an illegal subdivision in Karachi, Pakistan 533
25.5 Forced relocation in Phnom Penh, Cambodia 538
25.6 Principles of the land sharing strategy in Bangkok, Thailand 539
25.7 Site and services schemes in Pakistan: lessons in failure and
success 543
26.1 The inadequacy of water supply in Third World cities 549
26.2 Environmental problems in a low income community in
Karachi, Pakistan 551
26.3 Environmental hazards for children at work in India 552
26.4 The 1999 mudslides in Caracas, Venezuela 553
26.5 Air pollution in the Valley of Death 555
26.6 River pollution in Dares Salaam, Tanzania 556
26.7 The anatomy of a disaster: the 1998 flood in Dhaka, Bangladesh 558
26.8 The ecological footprint of Jakarta, Indonesia 559
27.1 HIV/AIDS: the modern plague 563
27.2 Aetiology of Chaga s disease 565
27.3 Health problems in low income settlements in Third World cities 565
27.4 Health care provision in the slums of Nairobi, Kenya 566
BOXES
27.5 Urban agriculture in Chinese cities 570
28.1 Traffic and transport in the Bangkok metropolitan region 578
28.2 The bicycle in Third World cities 582
28.3 Cycle rickshaws and traffic congestion in Dhaka, Bangladesh 584
29.1 Clients and radicals in a Lima shanty town, Peru 592
29.2 The definition of an urban social movement 593
29.3 Direct action by the hungry poor 595
29.4 Establishing autonomous housing co operatives in Karachi,
Pakistan 597
29.5 Participative budgeting in Belo Horizonte, Brazil 598
29.6 The Orangi Pilot Project in Karachi, Pakistan 599
29.7 Structure and goals of the Alliance in Mumbai, India 600
30.1 Main urban dimensions of Agenda 21 of the Rio Earth
Summit 607
30.2 Cities and environmental issues 608
30.3 London s ecological footprint 610
30.4 The urban waste economy in Bangalore, India 612
30.5 Project activities with waste scavengers in Bandung,
Indonesia 613
30.6 Car related urban problems 615
30.7 Kansai, Japan: a creative network city 621
30.8 The informational city region of the twenty first century 622
30.9 Digitale Stad, Amsterdam, Netherlands 623
|
any_adam_object | 1 |
author | Pacione, Michael 1947- |
author_GND | (DE-588)132778971 |
author_facet | Pacione, Michael 1947- |
author_role | aut |
author_sort | Pacione, Michael 1947- |
author_variant | m p mp |
building | Verbundindex |
bvnumber | BV019705575 |
callnumber-first | G - Geography, Anthropology, Recreation |
callnumber-label | GF125 |
callnumber-raw | GF125 |
callnumber-search | GF125 |
callnumber-sort | GF 3125 |
callnumber-subject | GF - Human Ecology and Anthropogeography |
classification_rvk | RB 10627 |
ctrlnum | (OCoLC)55982390 (DE-599)BVBBV019705575 |
dewey-full | 910/.9173/2 |
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dewey-ones | 910 - Geography and travel |
dewey-raw | 910/.9173/2 |
dewey-search | 910/.9173/2 |
dewey-sort | 3910 49173 12 |
dewey-tens | 910 - Geography and travel |
discipline | Geographie |
edition | 2. ed. |
format | Book |
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id | DE-604.BV019705575 |
illustrated | Illustrated |
indexdate | 2024-07-09T20:04:15Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 0415343054 0415343062 9780415343053 9780415343060 |
language | English |
lccn | 2004015892 |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-013033058 |
oclc_num | 55982390 |
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physical | XLII, 686 S. Ill., graph. Darst., Kt. |
publishDate | 2005 |
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publisher | Routledge |
record_format | marc |
spelling | Pacione, Michael 1947- Verfasser (DE-588)132778971 aut Urban geography a global perspective Michael Pacione 2. ed. London [u.a.] Routledge 2005 XLII, 686 S. Ill., graph. Darst., Kt. txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Géographie urbaine Stadsgeografie gtt aUrban geography Stadtgeografie (DE-588)4056733-3 gnd rswk-swf Stadtgeografie (DE-588)4056733-3 s DE-604 HBZ Datenaustausch application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=013033058&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | Pacione, Michael 1947- Urban geography a global perspective Géographie urbaine Stadsgeografie gtt aUrban geography Stadtgeografie (DE-588)4056733-3 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4056733-3 |
title | Urban geography a global perspective |
title_auth | Urban geography a global perspective |
title_exact_search | Urban geography a global perspective |
title_full | Urban geography a global perspective Michael Pacione |
title_fullStr | Urban geography a global perspective Michael Pacione |
title_full_unstemmed | Urban geography a global perspective Michael Pacione |
title_short | Urban geography |
title_sort | urban geography a global perspective |
title_sub | a global perspective |
topic | Géographie urbaine Stadsgeografie gtt aUrban geography Stadtgeografie (DE-588)4056733-3 gnd |
topic_facet | Géographie urbaine Stadsgeografie aUrban geography Stadtgeografie |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=013033058&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
work_keys_str_mv | AT pacionemichael urbangeographyaglobalperspective |