Development in an Urban World
- Project by UNU-Wider - 2008
Theme: Poverty, Inequality and Well-being
- Abstract:
In 2007 the number of urban inhabitants will surpass rural
dwellers as a percentage of the total world population. By
2030 the proportion of people living in cities globally is
expected to reach 61%, with almost 80% of urban dwellers
living in less developed countries. For the first time in
history the world will tip from being predominantly rural to
predominantly urban and virtually all projected world
population growth will be absorbed by cities in the south over
the next fifty years. We need to understand the implications
of this 2007 tipping point for cities as well as the
countries, regions, and international development systems of
which they are a part.
- Keywords:
- urban, population growth, tipping point, urbanization,
poverty, economic integration, ecological footprint,
cosmopolitanism
- Director:
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- Assistant:
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- Workshops
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- Publications:
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- Foundations
of Minority Communities: Resident Koreans in Japan
- Agglomeration
Index
- Building
Sustainable Historic Centres:
- Challenges
for Latin American Cities
Paola Jirón - April 2012
Current urban interventions, particularly in cities in developing countries like Santiago
de Chile, evidence major neglect in understanding the way contemporary living takes
place and how it is changing under processes of globalization, global warming,
technological advances, as well as specific national and local processes. Traditional
ways of analysing urban living are no longer adequate to tackle urban issues, thus new
questions need to be asked in order to achieve better comprehension.
- The
Challenges of Global Environmental Change for Urban Africa
David Simon - May 2010
Cities—especially those with substantial poor populations—will face increasingly
severe challenges in tackling the impacts of global environmental change (GEC).
As economic dynamos and increasingly important population concentrations, cities
both contribute substantially, and often are very vulnerable, to the impacts of
GEC. This applies strongly in Africa, one of the world’s poorest regions. The
inability of even a relatively wealthy and well protected city such as New
Orleans in the USA to withstand Hurricane Katrina has helped focus attention on
the vulnerability of cities that are less protected. Coastal cities and towns
from Dakar (which is used as a case study) via Lagos, Cape Town, Maputo and
Mombasa to Djibouti contain many low-lying areas, often accommodating
concentrations of poor residents, strategic infrastructure and economic
production. However, different combinations of challenges will affect many
inland urban centres. Tackling GEC successfully will require more than enhanced
disaster preparedness.
- Cityness
and African Urban Development
Edgar Pieterse - May 2010
This paper explores one possible argument for how to respond to the epistemic troubles
in the production of knowledge about urban Africa. The problem I have in mind is the
preponderance of policy-oriented research on the development challenges and absences
of African cities, as opposed to a more rounded theorization of urban life (urbanism), or
cityness. The paper starts by recounting the challenge thrown forth by Jennifer
Robinson and Achille Mbembe and Sarah Nuttall to take African ‘cityness’ or
‘worldliness’ seriously in our engagement with the African city. This starting point
leads on to an exploration of what cityness can mean, given the overdetermining effect
of violence in African social life, in no small measure a consequence of the colonial era
of terror and exploitation, but also now remade and re-embedded in enduring
inequalities that mark everyday life. In my reading this issue looms so large in the
contemporary city that I found it impossible, within the constraints of this essay, to
explore in detail other dimensions of urban sociality. As a result I simply assert that in
the absence of a deep philosophical understanding of the social, it is almost impossible
to hold on to a liberal humanist moral project of the kind which frequently underpins
policy prescriptions to improve the quality of life, livelihoods, governance and social
fabric in African cities.
- Cocaine
Cities
- Dar
es Salaam as a 'Harbour of Peace' in East Africa
- Evolving
City Systems
Henry G. Overman1 and Anthony J. Venables - March 2010
This paper reviews the literature on the forces driving urbanization in developing
countries. It presents a model outlining how globalization can lead to the evolution of an
urban structure which may approximate Zipf’s law. Policy implications are outlined.
- The
Excluded Poor
How Targeting Has Left out the Poor
in Peripheral Cities in the Philippines
Michael P. Canares - May 2010
Constrained by resource limitations and challenged by the increasing incidence of
poverty in the country, the Philippine government embarked on an anti-poverty
programme that sought to identify where the poorest people were, what were their
specific needs, and how government and other stakeholders (e.g., non-government
organizations, international development agencies, and the private sector) should
respond to their pressing concerns. Despite deficiencies in methodology, poverty
statistics in the Philippines have recently become not only as the means of identifying
the most deprived regions or provinces, but also as a weather vane that points to where
resources and efforts need to be directed and how these are to be spent.
This paper scrutinizes the gains of this approach with particular reference to the urban
poor in two cities: Butuan, the capital city of Agusan del Norte, once home to the largest
logging operations in Mindanao, and Tagbilaran, the capital of the tourist province of
Bohol.
The study concluded that the poor in the cities in the periphery are sidelined by two
different trends. On one hand, their needs and concerns are prioritized less because of a
poverty targeting framework that dictates how development interventions are to be
pursued and how development funds are allocated. On the other hand, their needs and
concerns oftentimes are underinvested because of their relative low significance as an
urban centre in comparison to other cities. If these trends continue, the future of cities,
particularly those located in the peripheries of an archipelagic country like the
Philippines, will become increasingly characterized by added poverty and vulnerability.
- The
Face of Urban Poverty
Explaining the Prevalence of Slums in
Developing Countries
Ben C. Arimah - March 2010
One of the most visible and enduring manifestations of urban poverty in developing
countries is the formation and proliferation of slums. While attention has focused on the
rapid pace of urbanization as the sole or major factor explaining the proliferation of
slums and squatter settlements in developing countries, there are other factors whose
impacts are not known with much degree of certainty. It is also not clear how the effects
of these factors vary across regions of the developing world. This paper accounts for
differences in the prevalence of slums among developing countries using data drawn
from the recent global assessment of slums undertaken by the United Nations Human
Settlements Programme. The empirical analysis identifies substantial inter-country
variations in the incidence of slums both within and across the regions of Africa, Asia as
well as, Latin America and the Caribbean. Further analysis indicates that higher GDP
per capita, greater financial depth and increased investment in infrastructure will reduce
the incidence of slums. Conversely, the external debt burden, inequality in the
distribution of income, rapid urban growth and the exclusionary nature of the regulatory
framework governing the provision planned residential land contribute positively to the
prevalence of slums and squatter settlements.
- Fiscal
Decentralization and Urbanization in Indonesia
- The
Gendered Nature of Asset Accumulation in Urban Contexts
- Globalization
and Exclusionary Urban Growth in Asian Countries
- Globalizing
Households and Multi-ethnic Community Building in Japan
- Globalizing
Shanghai
- Growth
and Recovery in a Time of Default
- Health
and the Urban Transition: Effects of Household
Perceptions, Illness, and Environmental Pollution on Clean
Water Investment
- ICT
Sector, Globalization and Urban Economic Growth
- Identity
and Space on the Borderland between Old and New in
Shanghai: A Case Study
- Infrastructure
and City Competitiveness in India
- Infrastructure
and Poverty Reduction
- Irregular
Urbanization as a Catalyst for Radical Social Mobilization
- Is
Internal Migration Bad for Receiving Urban Centres?
Evidence from Brazil, 1995-2000
Céline Ferré - April 2011
During the twentieth century, internal migration and urbanization shaped Brazil’s
economic and social landscape. Cities grew tremendously, while immigration
participated in the rapid urbanization process and the redistribution of poverty between
rural and urban areas. In 1950, about a third of Brazil’s population lived in cities; this
figure grew to approximately 80 per cent by the end of the nineteenth century. The
Brazilian population redistributed unevenly—some dynamic regions became population
magnets, and some neighbourhoods within cities became gateway clusters in which the
effects of immigration proved particularly salient. This study asks, has domestic
migration to cities been part of a healthy process of economic transition and mobility for
the country and its households? Or has it been a perverse trap?
- Is
There Such a Thing as a Post-Apartheid City?
- Latin
American Urban Development into the 21st Century
- Latin
American Urban Development into the 21st Century: Towards
a Renewed Perspective on the City
- The
Legacy Effect of Squatter Settlements on Urban
Redevelopment
- Local
Government, Taxes, and Guns
- Moderating
Urbanization and Managing Growth
- A
New Way of Monitoring the Quality of Urban Life
- Parsing
the Urban Poverty Puzzle
- Passage,
Profit, Protection and the Challenge of Participation
- Public-Private
Co-operation for Gas Provision in Poor Neighbourhoods of
Buenos Aires
- Separate
but Equal Democratization?
- Significance
of Public Space in the Fragmented City
- Socio-Spatial
Implications of Street Market Regulation Policy
- Solid
Wastes, Poverty and the Environment in Developing Country
Cities
- Special
Issue: African Development in an Urban World: Beyond the
Tipping Point
- Suburbanization
and Residential Desegregation in South Africa's Cities
- The
Tangled Web of Associational Life
- Toward
Efficient Urban Form in China
- Urban
Development Transitions and their Implications for Poverty
Reduction and Policy Planning in Uganda
- Urban
Myths and the Mis-use of Data that Underpin them
- Urban
Settlement
- Urban
Violence Is not (Necessarily) a Way of Life: Towards a
Political Economy of Conflict in Cities
- Urbanization
and Development in Asia: Multidimensional Perspectives
- Urbanization
and Development: Multidisciplinary Perspectives
- Urbanization
and the South Asian Enigma: A Case Study of India
- Violent
Urbanization and Homogenization of Space and Place
- Women
and Landed Property in Urban India
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