unit 14: networks of cities

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Unit 14: Networks of Cities Two examples of network flow between cities in the US: internet connectivi ty (top), and recorded business travel flow (bottom) Case Study - Box 14.2

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Unit 14: Networks of Cities. Two examples of network flow between cities in the US: internet connectivity (top), and recorded business travel flow (bottom) Case Study - Box 14.2. OBJECTIVES Demonstrate the distinctions between local, national, regional and world cities in the urban hierarchy - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Unit 14: Networks of Cities

Unit 14: Networks of Cities

Two examples of network flow between cities in the US: internet connectivity (top), and recorded business travel flow (bottom)

Case Study - Box 14.2

Page 2: Unit 14: Networks of Cities

OBJECTIVES

• Demonstrate the distinctions between local, national, regional and world cities in the urban hierarchy

• Discuss how markets (and the range and threshold for goods) creates a network of cities

• Explain the regional variations in the global network of cities and how it leads to distinctive regional urban geography

• Examine national networks of primacy and rank-size distribution

Page 3: Unit 14: Networks of Cities

• First urban networks were periodic markets with travelling vendors

• With more demand, traders could stay in one location and create fixed markets

• Towns were distributed regularly to provide rural areas access to markets

Regional Networks

Page 4: Unit 14: Networks of Cities

A modern roadside market in Jamaica. (Fig 14.1)

Page 5: Unit 14: Networks of Cities

Periodic markets seek to either minimize

travel for vendors by bringing them closer

together (A), or maximize demand by

spreading markets across space (B).

(Fig 14.2)

Page 6: Unit 14: Networks of Cities

A fixed market in Curaçao. (Fig 14.3)

Page 7: Unit 14: Networks of Cities

• Range: distance consumers are willing to travel• Threshold: minimum population to support a

particular business • Complementary region: area surrounding a city

where that city dominates the sale of particular goods

• Theory explained location of agricultural settlements, but the ideas of theory important of understanding relationship in urban networks

Central Place Theory (Walter Christaller)

Page 8: Unit 14: Networks of Cities

Market areas in central place systems. (Fig 14.5)

Page 9: Unit 14: Networks of Cities

The Galpin model demonstrates a regular distribution of towns surrounded by circular complementary regions, which may overlap.

(Fig 14.4)

Page 10: Unit 14: Networks of Cities

• Rank Size distribution (Zipf’s Law) • Regular distribution of big cities• In large countries, like China, India, USA

• Primate Distribution• Imbalanced distribution; focused on 1 city• Disproportionately large and important• 3x the size of the next two biggest cities

• Thailand: Bangkok produces almost half on the national GDP

• Some imperial centers, some colonial hubs

National Networks

Page 11: Unit 14: Networks of Cities

Plotting US city population against expected values according to Zipf’s

Law. (Fig 14.6)

Page 12: Unit 14: Networks of Cities

• Globalization and World Cities research network collected data on 100 global advanced producer service firms and identified a global urban hierarchy (Fig 14.8)

• London and New York are atop all urban hierarchy schemes as global cities

• New centers of metropolitan modernity are emerging in the Far East

• Dense networks of interpersonal contact and centers of important social capital are vital to international finance

• Research shows global network based on flows—migration, capital and culture• Flows transform the systems

Global Urban Networks

Page 13: Unit 14: Networks of Cities

The global urban network according to GAWC. www.lboro.ac.uk/gawc/.

(Fig 14.8)

Page 14: Unit 14: Networks of Cities

CONCLUSION

• Cities in the urban hierarchy can be differentiated into local, national, regional and world cities

• Markets (and the range and threshold for goods) create a network of cities

• Regional variations in the global network of cities lead to distinctive regional urban geography

• National urban networks dominated by one city display primacy and countries with many large cities follow a rank-size distribution