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Situation
The relative location of a place in reference to its surrounding features, or its regional position with reference to other places
capitalism
an economic and political system in which a country's trade and industry are controlled by private owners for profit, rather than by the state.
communism
An economic and political system in which all property is publicly owned and managed
streetcar suburb
A settlement outside of a city with streetcar lines; the streetcars take residents into and out of the city easily
second urban revolution
The industrial innovations in mining and manufacturing that led to an increase in urban growth
redevelopment
set of activities intended to revitalize an area that has fallen on hard times
metropolis
A very large and densely populated city, particularly the capital or major city of a country or region
urban area
Any self
urbanized area
In the United States, an urban area with at least 50,000 people.
urban cluster
In the United States, an urban area with between 2,500 and 50,000 inhabitants.
Metropolitan Statistical Area (MSA)
In the United States, a region with at least one urbanized area in its core
Micropolitan Statistical Area
In the United States, a region with one or more urban clusters with at least 10,000 people at its cores
suburb
A populated area on the outskirts of a city
urbanization rate
The percentage of a nation's population living in towns and cities
Suburbanization
The movement of people from urban core areas to the surrounding outskirtsof the cities
Sprawl
The tendency of cities to grow outward in an unchecked manner
automobile cities
cities whose size and shape are dictated by and almost require individual automobile ownership
decentralize
In an urban context, to move business operations from core city areas into outlying areas such as suburbs
edge city
A concentration of business, shopping, and entertainment that developed in the suburbs, outside of a city's traditional downtown or central business district
boomburg
a place with more than 100,000 residents that is not a core city in a metropolitan area; a large suburb with its own government; a large suburb with its own government
infill development
The building of new retail, business, or residential spaces on vacant or underused parcels in already
exurb
A semirural district located beyond the suburbs that is often inhabited by well to do families
world city
A city that is a control center of the global economy, in which major decisions are made about the world's commercial networks and financial markets (also called a global city)
gated community
Privately governed and highly secure residential area within the bounds of a city; often has a fence or a gate surrounding it
urban system
a set of interdependent cities or urban places connected by networks
urban heirarchy
A ranking of cities, with the largest and most powerful cities at the top of the heirarchy
rank size rule
The population of a settlement is inversely proportional to its rank in the urban hierarchy
Primate City
A city that is much larger than any other city in the country and that dominates the country's economic, political, and cultural life; does not follow rank
Central Place Theory
A model, developed by Walter Christaller, that attempts to understand why cities are located where they are
central place
a settlement that makes certain types of products and services available to consumers
threshold
In central place theory, the size of the population required to support businesses
range
in central place theory, the average maximum distance people will travel to purchase a good or service
gravity model
The idea that the closer two places are, the more they will influence each other
concentric zone model
A model of a city's internal organization developed by E. W. Burgess organized in five concentric rings that model the arrangement of different residential zones radiating outward from a central business district
Hoyt Model
A model of a city's internal organization, developed by Homer Hoyt, that focuses on transportation and communication as the drivers of the city's layout
Multiple Nuclei Model
A model of a city's internal organization, developed by Chaucey Harris and Edward Ullman, showing residential districts organized around several nodes (nuclei) rather than one CBD
Galactic City Model
A model of a city's internal organization in which the central business district remains central, but multiple shopping areas, office parks, and industrial districts are scattered throughout the surrounding suburbs and linked by metropolitan expressway systems
GriffinFord model a model of the internal structure of the Latin American city
gentrification
the process whereby the character of a poor urban area is changed by wealthier people moving in, improving housing, and attracting new businesses, typically displacing current inhabitants in the process.
percieved density
General impression of the estimated number of people present in a given area.
Zoning regulations
laws that dictate how land can be used
fiscal squeeze
occurs when city revenues cannot keep up with increasing demands for city services and expenditures on decaying urban infrastructure
built environment
the human made space in which people live, work, and recreate on a day to day basis
smart growth
policies that combat regional sprawl by addressing issues of population density and transportation
compact design
Development that grows up (in the form of taller buildings) rather than out (in the form of urban sprawl)
diverse housing options
policy that encourages building quality housing for people and families of all life stages and income levels in a range of prices within a neighborhood
New Urbanism
An approach to city planning that focuses on fostering European style cities of dense settlements, attractive architecture, and housing of different types and prices within walking distance to shopping, restaurants, jobs, and public transportation
greenbelt
A zone of grassy, forested, or agricultural land separating urban areas
zoning
The classification of land according to restrictions on its use and development
Slow growth city
A city that changes its zoning laws to decrease the rate at which the city spreads horizontally, with the goal of avoiding the negative effects of sprawl
anti
displacement tenant activists
de facto segregation
Racial segregation that is not supported by law but is still apparent
Mortgage
A load that is taken out to purchase a home
redlining
The practice of denying services or restricting access to housing in certain neighborhoods based on racial or ethnic demographics, often leading to residential segregation.
blockbusting
A practice in which realtors persuade white homeowners in a neighborhood to sell their homes by convincing them that the neighborhood is declining due to black families moving in
white flight
The mass movement of white people from the city to the suburbs
affordability
the maximum price that a buyer can afford to pay for a house or apartment
Housing Choice Voucher Program
A federal government program to assist very low income families, the elderly, and the disabled with affordable, decent, safe, and sanitary housing.
violent crime
A category of crime that includes murder, rape, robbery, and aggravated assault
social controls
Formal or informal institutions that help to maintain law and order in a place
environmental injustice
Occurs when certain groups carry a larger share of environmental risks and hazards than groups who have the power to influence decisions about the environment
Environmental racism
Discrimination in environmental policy and decision-making, often affecting minority communities more adversely than others. It includes unequal exposure to environmental hazards and limited access to natural resources.
environmental justice
A social movement and framework that seeks to address the inequitable distribution of environmental benefits and burdens, ensuring all communities have access to a clean environment and are protected from environmental hazards.
squatter settlement
An area of degraded, seemingly temporary, inadequate, and often illegal housing
Land tenure
The right to own or hold property; it defines the ways in which rights to that property are managed.
Inclusionary Zoning
municipal and county planning ordinances that require a given share of new construction to be affordable by people with low to moderate incomes.
exclusionary zoning
A land use regulation that restricts certain types of development, particularly affordable housing, in specific areas to maintain the socioeconomic status of the neighborhood.
NIMBY;s
Abbreviation for "not in my backyard"; term for people who try to prevent the construction of affordable housing and other types of development in their neighborhood
below market rate housing
Housing that costs much less than the going rate
urban renewal
Large scale redevelopment of the built environment in downtown and older inner city neighborhoods
fiscal imbalance
Occurs when a government must spend more than it receives in taxes
fiscal zoning
The practice of using local land
ecological footprint
The total amount of natural resources used and their impact on the natural environment
urban heat island
A mass of warm air in cities, generated by urban building materials and human activities, that sits over a city
urban footprint
The spatial extent of the impacts of urban areas on the natural environment.
urban risk divide
the idea that disasters and disaster risk become urban phenomena as the world's population becomes increasingly concentrated in large cities
brownfields
properties whose use or development may be complicated by the potential presence of hazardous substances or pollutants
brownfield redemption
The process of removing or sealing off contaminants so that a site may be used again without any health concerns
Phytoremediation
The removal of contaminants with plant species that react with or degrade contaminants or draw up contaminants from the soil into shoots and leaves
Farmland Protection Policy Act
U.S. law that grants municipalities oversight over federally funded development projects on farmland
Scattered developments
Subdivisions or developments that do not border on existing settlements and that remove agricultural land from production