1 / 21

A world of cities

A world of cities. The ‘urban age’: > 50% of the world population now lives in (booming) cities

bryga
Download Presentation

A world of cities

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. A world of cities The ‘urban age’: > 50% of the world population now lives in (booming) cities No straightforward transition process: contemporary urbanization must be conceptualized as a structural transformation along, and intensified interaction between, every point of an urban-rural continuum Some staggering figures: - 1950-today: 86 → > 400 cities > 1 million inhabitants - from 2020 onwards: population growth = urban growth Today’s changes are quantitatively and qualitatively different from earlier phases Quantitatively: much stronger growth figures E.g., London (1800-1910: x7) versus Lagos (1950-today: x40) Qualitatively: decoupling ‘development’ and urbanization, new forms of urban centrality E.g., 95% of urban growth in the ‘Global South’, New York was considered to be ‘history’ in the 70s There are differential patterns, cf. China ↔ India ↔ Latin America and Africa

  2. De ‘Pearl River Delta’

  3. Re-thinking cities in globalization (1) New York (and other cities in the 70s): decline as the only option because of the supposed ‘end of geography’ < ICT/services-nexus However, the opposite has happened: a renewed centrality for cities < ICT/services-nexus Why is this the case? 1) Importance of proximity in advanced services 2) Globalization 1: central marketplace for services (“you have to be there”) 3) Globalization 2: office network covering all major cities to service client World cities/Global cities according to Saskia Sassen: sites for the production of advanced services for a global marketplace

  4. The geography of Internet Traffic (telegeography.com)

  5. Global cities as sites for the production of ‘producer services’

  6. Global service centres based on Sassen (GaWC)

  7. Declining energy input/waste output in global cities

  8. Re-thinking cities in globalization (2) Result: the world’s most connected cities in contemporary globalization are getting closer London-Frankfurt “A virtual office in two centres ... all those 100% are working together as one team, they’re a European team with one head, there are no two heads any more ... This comparison Frankfurt and London - what does it mean? … I think increasingly we get to the point where we say it doesn’t matter.” (German bank, London, 2001) New York-London “It’s amazing how this traffic increases. In that sense those two cities are moving closer together.” (US advertising, London, 2001) World cities = Sites of interconnecting flows in a multi-scale ‘world city network’ World cities = A global-local space of interaction World city network = aggregation of inter-city flows within contemporary globalization

  9. ‘NY-LON’Newsweek13 Nov. 2000(Source: Smith, 2005)

  10. Times Square New York

  11. Rio de Janeiro

  12. Jakarta

  13. The Globalization and World Cities research group (GaWC) GaWC: research group that has been founded to devise a method for measuring relations between cities Starting points: ‘Globalization’: key cities cannot be purely understood in a ‘national’ framework ‘Inter-city-relations’: key cities derive their functional importance from connections with/to other cities → Focus on office networks of ‘producer services’ such as Deloitte = services that cover financial, legal, and general management matters, innovation,... →Starting point: global inter-city relations < shared presence of service firms

  14. WCN < shared presence of APS firms

  15. Measurement of the WCN Measurement of the WCN < a matrix of firms with information on their offices across world cities, whereby each cell describes the standardized importance of a city to a firm’s global service provision Choice of sectors (6): accountancy, advertising, banking/finance, insurance, law, management consultancy Choice of global service firms (100): a leading firm in the sector having offices in 15 or more different cities Choice of cities (315): capital cities of all but the smallest states plus many other important cities in larger states Standardized measurement of importance of a firm in a city (e.g. number of practitioners in a law firm) and their extra-locational functions (e.g. regional headquarters) < website APS firm 315 x 100 matrix summarizing global connectivity

  16. The (urban) world according to GaWC

  17. WCN 2000-2008: major changes • Decline of US cities (e.g. All cities but NY decline) • Rise of Chinese cities (Shanghai, Beijing, Guangzhou) • Concomitant rise of cities well-connected to Chinese cities (e.g. Sydney and Seoul)

More Related