Zusammenfassung der Ressource
World Cities
- Internal growth results from city dwellers having high birth rates
- Rural- Urban migration - Most of those who move from the countryside to cities are young, fertile people who therefore cause a high birth rate within cities
- Internal growth accounts for 60% of urban population growth and migration around 30%
- The poorest areas of the world have the fastest urban growth rates
- Some cities can grow at rates of 6-8% per year, with much of the growth consisting of slums
- The population living in developing world slums is likely to reach 1.3-1.4 billion by 2020
- Many rural-urban
migrants are well
informed about the
city to which they are
migrating
- Extended family of friends may have
organised jobs for the migrants
- The majority who move are
young and relatively well skilled
- Who are the rural-urban
migrants - Mexico city
- A study of migrants to Mexico city between 1995 and
2000, found that in-migrants numbered 521,000.
- Out-migration slightly exceeded this, so the city's
population growth of 1.4% per year was a result
of internal growth
- The majority of
rural-urban
migrants come
from poor farming
states close to
and south of
Mexico City
- Many of these are
young women
(average age 22),
escaping rural poverty
and seeking low-skill
domestic work in
Mexico City
- These migrants are better
educated than the
population in general, having
had 8-9 years in school
compared to the national
average of 7.6 years
- There is large
out-migration from Mexico
city, but this is migration
to the sprawling fringes of
the city, in other states,
so actually represents
urbanisation
- Many of Asia's cities are centres of wealth,
many of Africa's are desperately poor
- Some migrants may
be young, skilled and
entrepreneurial,
others may be older,
poorer and perhaps
forced to migrate
- Urban Process
- Urban growth refers to the
growth in the physical size of
a city
- Urban sprawl occurs when urban
areas grow outwards, usually in
an uncontrolled way, on to
surrounding rural land
- In the developing world this often results from illegal slum growth
- In developing cities, suburbanisation
occurs when the wealthy choose t live on
the city edge to escape poverty, crime,
congestion and pollution of the city centre
- A modern trend is for new suburbs
to be gated, with walls, gates and
security to keep non-residents out.
This is common in Latin America
and South African cities
- Counter-urbanisation refers to the movement of people out of cities and into rural areas
- Counter-urbanisation is mainly a developed world process, but
the very rich in the developing world may also counter-urbanise
- Reurbanisation may follow attempts to regenerate areas of cities that have declined
- Reurbanisation is a developed world trend beginning to occur in
Asian cities
- Some cities
may be
growing
largely
because of
migration,
others by
internal
growth
- Many Asian cities are beginning
to plan their growth, whereas in
Africa planning is prevented by
poverty and lack of planers
- The rate of population growth
varies from around 2-4% per year
for Latin American cities, to 4-8%
for some African and Asian cities
- Different urban processes are
occurring in different cities
- Chongqing
- China's fourth
largest
minicipality
- Up
stream
of the
Three
Gorges
dam
- Key inland
port on the
Yangtze
River
- Many of China's 8.5 million
annual rural-urban migrants
head to cities like Chonqing
- Chongqing city contains 4.1
million people, but the wider
municipality (urban area)
housed 31.5 million in 2005
- Over 1,300 rural-urban migrants arrive every day.
- The urban economy
grows by £7 million
per day
- Total population is
growing by around
500,000 per year
- Around
130,000 m sq.
of new
buildings are
constructed
daily
- Average income rose
by 66% between
2000 and 2005, to to
£750 per year, almost
three times the rural
average
- Urbanisation stages
- Immature
- Very rapid growth - 3% per year
- Largely migration growth
- Informal economy = 60%
- Small-scale manufacturing, street trading and urban farming
- Urbanisation
- Little planning
- Uncontrolled urban sprawl
- Squatter settlements dominate
- Basic needs
barely met
- 60%+ live in slums
- Environmental problems
- Kabul
- Lagos
- Kinshasa
- Consolidating
- Rapid growth - 1-3% per year
- Balance of migration and internal growth
- Manufacturing is important
- Some service industries
- Informal economy = 50%
- Urbanisation and Suburbanisation
- Attempts at planning
- Focused on waste, congestion and water supply
- Upgrading of
slums and some
social housing
- Most
basic
needs
met
- Cairo
- Mumbai
- Jakarta
- Chonqing
- Maturing
- Slow growth - Under 2% per year
- Largely internal growth
- Service industry dominates with
some manufacturing
- Informal economy under 40%
- Suburbanisation
- Effective attempts at housing, transport and land use planning
- Environmental problems being tackled
- Quality of life satisfactory for many
- Gated communities in suburbs
- Mexico City
- Sao
Paulo
- Beijing
- Established
- Very slow growth - Under 1% per yer
- Some are stable
- Dominated by professional, services and retail
- Formal economy
- Counter-urbanisation and reurbanisation
- Large scale suburbanisation with counter-urbanisation
- Since 1980, most have regenerated inner-city and former industrial area
- Quality of life is high for most
- Environmental quality is good
- London
- San Francisco
- Paris
- Birmingham
- Megacities are cities with population of 10 million +
- World cities are city's with major economic and
political power
- Political influence, e.g. New York is home to the United
nations
- Transport and communications, e.g.
Heathrow in London has more international
passengers than any other airport
- Economic power, e.g. The presence of stock
exchanges and the headquarters of major TNCs
- Growing cities in poorer
countries can be
unsustainable for several
reasons:
- Lack of adequate housing - due to
rapid growth, poverty and lack of
resources
- Poor health - linked to lack of water,
sanitation and medical facilities
- Weak urban governance -
a lack of will, combined with
a lack of resources, makes
change difficult
- Low environmental quality -
resulting from poor transport
infrastructure, lack of waste
systems and industrial pollution
- Poverty - resulting from low
wages and underemployment
- Improving slum housing
- Poor, unhealthy slum dwellers have
a low capacity for work, and huge
slum areas deter inward investment.
- Improving slums is an important
step in making cities more socially
and environmentally sustainable
- Eviction - The UN estimates that 6.7 million people were evicted from slums in 2000-02
- Security of tenure - The UN suggests that 30-50% of people in developing cities
have no legal right to occupy the land they inhabit. Tenure grants them that right
- Site and service - It is possible to set out roads, sewers and water
connections before slums develop. Low-income people move into
these areas and construct their homes on prepared sites
- Consolidation - Residents
gradually improve their homes
- Aided self help - Local councils and NGOs provide building
materials and training to help communities improve conditions
- Social housing -
new homes are built
and slums
demolished