Urban centres shape societies, but there is no systematic global approach analysing how countries are organized around multiple urban centres. We advance understanding by delineating 6,100 city–regions worldwide using a novel framework classifying 30,000 urban centres into four tiers and mapping their nested catchment areas based on travel time accessibility. We distinguish between primary and secondary city–regions whereby for the latter the catchment area of the urban centre being considered overlaps with that of an urban centre in a higher tier, which is not the case for primary city–regions. Our results show extensive interconnectedness among urban centres and with their surrounding areas, with 3.2 billion people having physical access to multiple tiers with 1-hour travel time, rising to 4.7 billion for 3-hours travel time. Importantly, among people living in or near towns and small cities, access to intermediate cities is far greater than to large cities. This highlights the essential role intermediate cities play in engaging surrounding populations. For the first time, city–regions around the world are identified systematically, showing great diversity in how societies are organized across urban tiers, depending on geography and national income. The associated spatial dataset is a powerful tool for regional planning, economic development, and natural resource management. The presentation will outline the approach taken to delineate city-regions and how the information in the dataset could be combined with socio-economic data for research applications in economics, regional planning, natural resource management, and geography.
Date & Time
April 18, 2024
10:00 am - 11:00 am
Location
More information about this event.
Contact Information
Megan Hay
- meh372 [at] cornell.edu
Speaker
Dr. Andrea Cattaneo
Departments
Department of Global Development
Cornell Food Systems & Global Change
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