PlANETARY URBANISATION IN A COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE
Building a comparative typology of global urbanisation processes, analysing the mechanisms that generate urban uniformity and difference, and proposing appropriate urban development model
The last two decades have seen a sharp increase in the speed, scale and scope of urbanisation that has fundamentally changed the character of urban areas. Transcending physical borders, political jurisdictions and social spheres, urbanisation has become a truly planetary phenomenon. While it is often assumed that this phenomenon leads inexorably to uniform and undifferentiated cities, evidence shows that it also gives rise to surprising forms of difference, diversity and variation within and between urban areas. This simultaneous proliferation and diversification of urban forms has important implications for urban planning and design. In the first instance, it demands a more supple conceptual framework that can both hold the processes of planetary urbanisation and remain sensitive to the diversifying local manifestations. While many urban studies have examined particular cases in this emerging situation, a comparative and synoptic approach that captures both global and local dimensions is still lacking.
This module aims to redress this lack. It not only analyses the emergence of new urban forms, but elaborates the processes of urbanisation to explain how general tendencies are materialised in specific places. Methodologically, the module is structured around comparative analyses of patterns and pathways of urbanization. Nine metropolitan areas are examined as case studies: Tokyo, Hong Kong/Shenzhen, Singapore, Kolkata, Istanbul, Lagos, Paris, Mexico City, and Los Angeles. There are three major research objectives: first, to develop a methodological framework for comparative analysis; second, to analyse the mechanisms and differences of planetary urbanisation and to establish a typology of contemporary urbanisation processes; and, third, to examine the range of possible urban development models and their practical implications. Special attention will be given to the analysis of urban potentials and the framing of possible strategies for a sustainable urban development.