PLAN262 Lecture Notes - Lecture 1: Global City, Intersectionality, Design Thinking

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The t(cid:449)e(cid:374)t(cid:455) fi(cid:396)st (cid:272)e(cid:374)tu(cid:396)(cid:455) has (cid:271)ee(cid:374) de(cid:272)la(cid:396)ed (cid:858)(cid:859)the (cid:272)e(cid:374)tu(cid:396)(cid:455) of the (cid:272)it(cid:455)(cid:859)(cid:859) i(cid:374) (cid:449)hi(cid:272)h u(cid:396)(cid:271)a(cid:374)isatio(cid:374) is happening on a global scale. Cities are complex social, economic, ecological and political systems. According to bain and peake, urbanisation is a slippery concept. It can best be understood in 3 ways: level. The level of urbanisation refers to a condition at a specific time (usually depicted as the percentage of a population living in urban areas of a country: process. The process of urbanisation is one that occurs over time as a function of the respective rates of change and relative sizes of the urban and rural population in a country: rate. The rate of urbanisation refers to the change in the proportion of urban population over time. Urbanisation is the result of urban population growth. It is influenced by several factors including: rural to urban migration, higher birth rates in urban area, higher death rates in rural areas.

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