Urban Systems by the Third Millennium: A Second Look

A second look is taken at "The Geography of the U.S. in the Year 2,000." A new interplay is seen of the countervailing pressures to disperse and to agglomerate. Polynucleated urban regions are seen, organized within and around a global poly center. There are certain imperatives: those of d...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of geography (Houston) 1990-05, Vol.89 (3), p.98-100
1. Verfasser: Berry, Brian J. L.
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description A second look is taken at "The Geography of the U.S. in the Year 2,000." A new interplay is seen of the countervailing pressures to disperse and to agglomerate. Polynucleated urban regions are seen, organized within and around a global poly center. There are certain imperatives: those of demographic cycles and of the economic long wave. These will interact with information-age technologies to change family structures, life styles, and locational preferences. The unexpected also should be expected: "catastrophes" in which existing arrangements are transformed and new structures put into place to replace them. A key to understanding is to continually probe the second derivatives: change in the nature of change.
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subjects agglomeration
Change
counterurbanization
demographic cycles
Demography
dispersion
economic long waves
Economics
Futures (of Society)
global polycenter
Human Geography
information age
Information Technology
Population Trends
Social Change
Technological Advancement
Technology
Urban Areas
Urban Studies
Urbanization
title Urban Systems by the Third Millennium: A Second Look
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