1st Edition

Urban Growth An Approach

By Brian T. Robson Copyright 1973
    284 Pages
    by Routledge

    284 Pages
    by Routledge

     Do large cities grow more or less rapidly than small ones? Why should the relationship between city size and population growth vary so much from one period to another? This book studies the process of population growth in a national set of cities, relating its findings to the theoretical concepts of urban geography. To test his ideas, the author studies the growth of cities in England and Wales between 1801 and 1911. His explanations draw strongly on the connection between growth and the adoption of innovations. He develops a model of innovation diffusions in a set of cities and, in support of this model, looks at the way in which three particular innovations - the telephone, building societies and gaslighting - spread amongst English towns in the nineteenth century.

    This book was first published in 1973.

    Part 1: Introduction

    1. Defining the city

    2. City systems and size distributions

    Part 2: Analysis

    3. The growth of cities in England and Wales in the nineteenth century

    4. Spatial patterns of urban growth

    Part 3: Approaches To Urbanism

    5. Technical innovations and the scatter of urban growth

    6. Simulating urban growth

    7. Growth rates and city size: urban growth and innovations

     

    Biography

    Brian T. Robson