1 / 23

The Introduction

The Introduction. Geo309 Urban Geography. Instructor: Jun Yan Geography Department SUNY at Buffalo. Outline. What’s Urban Geography? Key Issues Approaches Definition of City. So What Is Urban Geography?.

gari
Download Presentation

The Introduction

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Introduction Geo309 Urban Geography Instructor: Jun Yan Geography Department SUNY at Buffalo

  2. Outline • What’s Urban Geography? • Key Issues • Approaches • Definition of City

  3. So What Is Urban Geography? • Geography in general:how areas/spaces are same or different  ‘local variability within a general context’ • So Geography studies both: • Distinctiveness • Regularity • Therefore, Urban Geography studies: • Why cities are alike and different? • Regular patterns of urban development (housing, employment, diversity...) • The social, economic, & political trends of urban vs non-urban spaces

  4. Key Concepts • Urban geographers are generally interested in space: the ‘core’ concept of geography in general • All kinds of opportunities are spreading over space: the medium • City as: • product of underlying economic, social, political forces • also the shaper of them • City as: • part of a system of cities • individual place as well

  5. Key Concepts (Cont.) • To understand a place ‘urban’, urban geographers examine the ‘territorialization’ of economic, political and cultural activities within and between cities as well as between urban and non-urban spaces. • Sense of belongings

  6. Key Concepts (Cont.) • Urban geographers also investigate the patterns of interaction/movement over space • To fulfill their personal or social needs, people have to travel over space. It takes time and resources. • working • shopping • social contacts • goods distribution • Distance: a critical factor

  7. Key Concepts (Cont.) • Urban geographers also study what makes a city or a neighborhood in a city distinct ‘place’ • variability over space • functional differentiation • spatial regularity • Not only physical or material conditions of a place but also a sense of place: in people’s mind • landmarks • symbolic signs

  8. Related Disciplines • Geography (human, physical, historical) • Economics • Sociology • Political science • History • Architecture • Psychology • Anthropology • Urban Planning • …

  9. Careers In Your Future • City & neighborhood planning • Community development • Environmental protection • Transportation • Market research • Real estate development • Historic preservation • …

  10. Approaches • Idiographic: • ‘Settlement Geography’: cities as adaptation to its physical surroundings; • ‘Urban Morphology’: urban form, functional classification; • highly descriptive • site and situation of the city, mostly fieldworks • Positivism: • scientific methods – ‘Quantitative Revolution’, ‘Geographic/Spatial Science’ • hypothesis testing and model building – abstraction • Ignore the underlying process that shapes cities: how and why?

  11. Approaches (Cont.) • Behavioralism: • meaning– ‘social psychology’ • human activities and decision making • individual level • Political Economy • Influence of Marxism • macro level, aggregate and collective effects of group behavior • integration of macroeconomics, social theory, political science: availability of capitals, skilled labor, and the levels of government regulation

  12. So What Is City? • Very vague: • more populated (legally, minimum population) • urban lifestyle • more opportunities • highly specialized land uses • distinctive architectures • way beyond political city limit Definition: a city can be generally described as a concentration of people with a distinctive way of life in terms of employment patterns and life style.

  13. Influence of Cities

  14. So What Is City? • Metropolitan: • Defined by census bureau, since 1950 • county as building unit • Central city: total population > 50,000 and density >=1,000/sqr. Mile  Urbanized Area • Surrounding areas are economically and socially connected to the central city: commuting patterns

  15. Metropolitan Area • Metropolitan Statistics Area (MSA): 1983 • Primary Metropolitan Statistics Area (PMSA) • Consolidate Metropolitan Statistics Area (CMSA): at least 1,000,000 people, > 2 PMSAs

  16. Metropolitan Area

  17. Daily Commuting Field

  18. Population Density

  19. Blackout!

  20. Metropolitan Area

  21. US Census Unit • Census Bureau: • http://www.census.gov/ • Census Units: Hierarchical • Census tracts: uniform in terms of demographic and socioeconomic characteristics; usually fixed over time • Census block groups: smallest with detailed data • Census block: smallest unit with census data (basic population and housing data)

  22. US Census Unit

  23. US Census Unit

More Related