Limits on city size and related topics

•Case studies of Charleston, SC and Portland, OR conclude that urban sprawl land use growth as reflected in night lights is almost impossible to manage.•Agglomeration is a positively reinforcing process that lies at the foundation of urban growth.•It is nearly impossible to countering agglomeration,...

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Veröffentlicht in:Land use policy 2021-12, Vol.111, p.104963, Article 104963
Hauptverfasser: Haynes, Kingsley E., Kulkarni, Rajender, Sahay, Harshvardhan, Stough, Roger R.
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container_title Land use policy
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creator Haynes, Kingsley E.
Kulkarni, Rajender
Sahay, Harshvardhan
Stough, Roger R.
description •Case studies of Charleston, SC and Portland, OR conclude that urban sprawl land use growth as reflected in night lights is almost impossible to manage.•Agglomeration is a positively reinforcing process that lies at the foundation of urban growth.•It is nearly impossible to countering agglomeration, with negative spillovers and weak local governments.•Urban futures include mega urban regions which dominant as rural and smaller cities decline.•This mega-urban equilibrium is dependent on new technology and its implementation. This paper examines several concepts and applications that influence city and urban development. The purpose is to explore the limits to city and urban growth. These urban expansions are reflected in the growth of Charleston SC and Portland OR through their changes in night light expression. These concepts include carrying capacity, growth or cordon boundaries, agglomeration, technological change and human ingenuity and innovation. A conclusion of this review is that history suggests that there is no strong evidence that urban growth can be limited either in scale or extent. Alternative urban futures are created with a no limits assumption due to the positive reinforcing effects of agglomeration as against the limiting assumption of controlled growth. However, technology and human ingenuity operate to produce a larger and more dispersed urban landscape. Discussion and conclusions follow this qualitative analysis.
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subjects Agglomeration
Carrying capacity
Cities
City size
Environmental Sciences & Ecology
Environmental Studies
Land use
Life Sciences & Biomedicine
Night lights
Qualitative analysis
Qualitative research
Science & Technology
Spatial patterns
Technological change
Urban areas
Urban development
Urban environments
Urban growth
Urban sprawl
Urbanization
title Limits on city size and related topics
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