HKSYU Course Resources

Globalizing cities : a new spatial order?

edited by Peter Marcuse and Ronald van Kempen.
Oxford, U.K. : Blackwell, 2000.
"This collection of essays provides an international and comparative examination of changes in the spaces and forms of cities, revealing a growing pattern of spatial division and polarization." "The book begins with the editors' hypothesis that there is a new spatial order within cities as the result of the process of globalization. Current issues are examined including the effects of the intersection of global issues - such as economic restructuring and migration - with national and local influences, such as race, politics and culture. The international contributors to the volume use a series of case studies of cities ranging from New York to Calcutta, Frankfurt to Tokyo, Rio to Singapore, Brussels to Sydney, to discuss actual contemporary urban spatial change. In the concluding chapter, the editors summarize the contributions and present readers with a modification of the original hypothesis: not a new spatial order, but a significant reinforcement of earlier trends, with wide variations among cities."--BOOK JACKET.

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Bibliographic Information

Format:
book Book
Subject:
Cities and towns.
Spatial behavior.
Polarization (Social sciences)
Human geography.
Publication Year:
2000
Language:
English
Published:
Oxford, U.K.
ISBN:
9780631212904, 0631212892, 0631212906
Course:
SOC311
Sustainable and Innovative Cities in the Contemporary World
Series:
Studies in urban and social change.
Bibliography:
Includes bibliographical references (p. [276]-301) and index.

 

 


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