Wednesday 13 April 2011

Urbanization


The Urbanization of the World


         Urbanizationurbanization or urban drift is the physical growth of urban areas as a result of global  change. Urbanization is also defined by the United Nations as movement of people from rural to urban areas with population growth equating to urban migration. The United Nations projected that half of the world's population would live in urban areas at the end of 2008. Urbanization is closely linked to modernizationindustrialization, and the sociologicalprocess of     rationalizationUrbanization can describe a specific condition at a set time, ie. the proportion of total population or area in cities or towns, or the term can describe the increase of this proportion over time. So the term urbanization can represent the level of urban relative to overall population, or it can represent the rate at which the urban proportion is increasing.
Origin of Cities: Some Introductory Points


        The City is a relatively recent form of social organization.

  • Homo sapiens, the present human form has existed on earth for about 200,000 years, but cities have existed for less than 10,000 years.
  • Jericho in about 7000 B.C. grew from village to a "city" of about 3,000
  • 3,500-4,000 B.C. first large cities (population of about 25,000) were established in Mesopotamia.


A "city" refers to a place of relatively dense settlement -- dense enough so that city residents can not grow their own food.  A city population, therefore, is always dependent upon its "hinterlands" to provide it with food.  Not until agriculture developed could hinterlands provide food for their own populations and enough of a surplus to feed a city population. And in agricultural societies the surplus was so small that only a tiny proportion of an entire population could live in cities.  Up until very recently -- about 200 years ago -- that proportion was limited to about 5% of an entire population.  So cities existed, but there was no urbanization.

Urbanization refers to a process in which an increasing proportion of an entire population lives in cities and the suburbs of cities.  Historically, it has been closely connected with industrialization.  When more and more inanimate sources of energy were used to enhance human productivity (industrialization), surpluses increased in both agriculture and industry.  Larger and larger proportions of a population could live in cities.   Economic forces were such that cities became the ideal places to locate factories and their workers.


Urbanization of First World Societies


   In the United States, about 5% of the population lived in cities in 1800, but about 50% of the population lived in cities by 1920.  Throughout the 19th century, the US was urbanizing.  The same was true for most European societies during the 19th century. 
  
 

The 19th Century Growth of Chicago
1820
Population:
15
1854
Population:
55,000
1898
Population:
1,698,575
      Today about 80% of the US population lives in cities and suburbs.  Since no more than 100% of a population can possibly be urban, urbanization as a process is coming to an end.
How many major US cities can you locate in this satellite photo?






Urbanization of Third World Societies
   

Compare Urbanization in the World's More Developed and Less Developed Societies

Notice that at mid-century only 17.8% of the population of Third World societies lived in cities, but in the fifty years since 1950 that percent has increased to over 40%.   By the year 2030, almost 60% of Third World populations will live in cities. In just a few years the World will become predominately urban -- about 80-85 years after that happened in the United States. 
 

The World's Population Will be Predominately Urban  by the Year 2005-2010

         There is a very big question related to Third World urbanization:  Will it prove beneficial for people's lives?   Much of Third World urbanization is the result of overpopulation in the countryside.  In villages babies have been living and not dying.  A husband and wife who farm 15 acres might have three sons and three daughters.  All now live and grow up.  But there is not land enough for them to have the farms they need to marry and raise a family.   This lack of land for burgeoning rural populations forced them to leave the village and migrate to cities.  They find a place to live in the favela's and shantytowns -- such as the one pictured below  --  but often times they don't find productive employment. 
  
  

      Third World urbanization will be a beneficial social trend only if enough good jobs can be found for the rapidly growing population of Third World cities. 





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