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For the first time in human history more people now live and towns
and cities than in rural areas. In the wealthier countries of the
world, the transition from predominantly rural to urban habitation
is more or less complete. But in many parts of Africa, Asia and
Latin America, urban populations are expanding rapidly. Current UN
projections indicate that virtually all population growth in the
world over the next 30 years will be absorbed by towns and cities
in developing countries. These simple demographic facts have
profound implications for those concerned with understanding and
addressing the pressing global development challenges of reducing
poverty, promoting economic growth, improving human security and
confronting environmental change. This revised and expanded second
edition of Cities and Development explores the dynamic relationship
between urbanism and development from a global perspective. The
book surveys a wide range of topics, including: the historical
origins of world urbanization; the role cities play in the process
of economic development; the nature of urban poverty and the
challenge of promoting sustainable livelihoods; the complexities of
managing urban land, housing, infrastructure and urban services;
and the spectres of endemic crime, conflict and violence in urban
areas. This updated volume also contains two entirely new chapters:
one that examines the links between urbanisation and environmental
change, and a second that focuses on urban governance and politics.
Adopting a multidisciplinary perspective, the book critically
engages with debates in urban studies, geography and international
development studies. Each chapter includes supplements in the form
of case studies, chapter summaries, questions for discussion and
suggested further readings. The book is targeted at upper-level
undergraduate and graduate students interested in geography, urban
studies and international development studies, as well as policy
makers, urban planners and development practitioners.
For the first time in human history more people now live and towns
and cities than in rural areas. In the wealthier countries of the
world, the transition from predominantly rural to urban habitation
is more or less complete. But in many parts of Africa, Asia and
Latin America, urban populations are expanding rapidly. Current UN
projections indicate that virtually all population growth in the
world over the next 30 years will be absorbed by towns and cities
in developing countries. These simple demographic facts have
profound implications for those concerned with understanding and
addressing the pressing global development challenges of reducing
poverty, promoting economic growth, improving human security and
confronting environmental change. This revised and expanded second
edition of Cities and Development explores the dynamic relationship
between urbanism and development from a global perspective. The
book surveys a wide range of topics, including: the historical
origins of world urbanization; the role cities play in the process
of economic development; the nature of urban poverty and the
challenge of promoting sustainable livelihoods; the complexities of
managing urban land, housing, infrastructure and urban services;
and the spectres of endemic crime, conflict and violence in urban
areas. This updated volume also contains two entirely new chapters:
one that examines the links between urbanisation and environmental
change, and a second that focuses on urban governance and politics.
Adopting a multidisciplinary perspective, the book critically
engages with debates in urban studies, geography and international
development studies. Each chapter includes supplements in the form
of case studies, chapter summaries, questions for discussion and
suggested further readings. The book is targeted at upper-level
undergraduate and graduate students interested in geography, urban
studies and international development studies, as well as policy
makers, urban planners and development practitioners.
This is an open access title available under the terms of a CC
BY-NC-ND 4.0 international license. It is free to read on Oxford
Academic and offered as a free PDF download from OUP and selected
open access locations. Authoritarianism is on the rise globally,
with more than twice as many countries experiencing democratic
decline as democratic enhancement in recent years. This has been
occurring simultaneously with unprecedented rates of urbanization
in many parts of the world, raising questions about the role of
cities - often considered the focal points of democratic deepening
- in this authoritarian turn. While most literature considers
authoritarianism on the national scale, the chapters in this book
train their gaze on capital cities, which as 'containers' of both
capital and sovereignty are spaces in which authoritarian dominance
is increasingly built, contested, maintained, and undone. Focusing
on some of the world's fastest urbanizing regions - Sub-Saharan
Africa and South Asia - the book explores the multiple ways in
which authoritarian regimes have been attempting to build and
sustain long-term dominance in capital cities in order to meet the
challenge of urban political resistance. The diverse selection of
case studies presented here spans governing regimes that have
recently tried to build urban dominance and spectacularly failed,
as well as those that have managed to hold onto power by constantly
evolving strategies for dominance that limit the potential for
urban opposition to tip into regime overthrow. With chapters on
Addis Ababa, Colombo, Dhaka, Harare, Kampala, and Lusaka,
Controlling the Capital offers the first cross-regional comparative
study of the relationship between cities and political dominance.
It contributes to debates on authoritarianism and authoritarian
durability, urbanization, political contestation and resistance,
the politics of development, and the prospects for democracy.
Despite the rise of global technocratic ideals of city-making,
cities around the world are not merging into indistinguishable
duplicates of one another. In fact, as the world urbanizes, urban
formations remain diverse in their socioeconomic and spatial
characteristics, with varying potential to foster economic
development and social justice. In this book, Tom Goodfellow argues
that these differences are primarily rooted in politics, and if we
continue to view cities as economic and technological projects to
be managed rather than terrains of political bargaining and
contestation, the quest for better urban futures is doomed to fail.
Dominant critical approaches to urban development tend to explain
difference with reference to the variegated impacts of neoliberal
regulatory institutions. This, however, neglects the multiple ways
in which the wider politics of capital accumulation and
distribution drive divergent forms of transformation in different
urban places. In order to unpack the politics that shapes
differential urban development, this book focuses on East Africa as
the global urban frontier: the least urbanized but fastest
urbanizing region in the world. Drawing on a decade of research
spanning three case study countries (Ethiopia, Rwanda, and Uganda),
Politics and the Urban Frontier provides the first sustained,
book-length comparative analysis of urban development trajectories
in Eastern Africa and the political dynamics that underpin them.
Through a focus on infrastructure investment, urban propertyscapes,
street-level trading economies, and urban political protest, it
offers a multi-scalar, historically-grounded, and interdisciplinary
analysis of the urban transformations unfolding in the world's most
dynamic crucible of urban change.
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