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Published byDwayne Nigel Hart Modified over 9 years ago
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MDCs Industrial Revolution (Rural to Urban) began in 1800s Are MDCs fully urbanized? LDCs 8 of 10 most populous cities in LDC 8 of 10 most populous cities in LDC Issue- unlike MDCs lack of jobs in LDCs Leads to issues
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Metropolitan Statistical Area US Cities US Cities Percent Change Percent Change Map Percent Change Map Percent Change
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See Handout See Handout
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Laid out with a religious center- mosque, cathedral, etc Marketplace close to center Govt buildings and wealthy homes surround marketplace Lower status outside that and recent migrants on outer ring
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European powers colonized Africa, Asia and Latin America Built new cities near the old cities (sometimes they tore the old city down) European districts had Wider streets, public squares, larger houses surrounded by gardens, much less density Compared to narrow, winding streets, little open space and cramped conditions
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Wealthy people push out in elite residential sector Contains amenities for wealthy (shops,etc) Example- Rio de Janeiro Wealthy live in center city and south of city Low income is in north suburbs
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Known by many names- barrios, favelas, bustees, kampongs Grow because cities have housing shortage and can’t keep up with growth Few services One central well for water and central bathrooms Lack schools, paved roads, telephones, sewers Make-shift shelters
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Filtering Divide larger homes for low-income families Redlining Draw lines to identify areas to refuse to loan money to buy a house Urban Renewal Cities locate inner-city neighborhoods, buy the property, relocate the residents and rebuild the area
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Public Housing Low-income housing (pay 30% of income for rent) High percentage in inner-city neighborhoods Gentrification Middle-class people move into inner-city neighborhoods and renovate the housing
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Underclass- unending cycle of social and economic problems Lack of Job Skills- technical skills in an industrialized economy Homeless Crime- higher, drug addictions, etc Segregation- Still Exist???? Economic Segregation?????
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Peripheral Model Urban area consists of an inner city surrounded by large suburban residential and business areas tied together by ring road
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Edge Cities- start out as suburbs then become nodes (centers) Density Gradient- number of houses per unit of land decreases as distance from city center increases Sprawl- spread of development over landscape Extend roads and utilities Wastes land
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Greenbelts- rings of open space Suburban Segregation Residents separated from commercial and manufacturing areas Housing segregated by cost, size, location, etc Zoning Ordinances Spatial separation- residential, commercial, industrial to prevent mixed land use Transportation Issues Motor Vehicles- rush hour commuting Public Transportation- rapid transit Service vs. Cost- are projects worth it????
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