Perspectives in English Urban History
In: The economic history review, Band 27, Heft 4, S. 685
ISSN: 1468-0289
193923 Ergebnisse
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In: The economic history review, Band 27, Heft 4, S. 685
ISSN: 1468-0289
In: The Economic Journal, Band 83, Heft 329, S. 288
In: The economic history review, Band 26, Heft 2, S. 373
ISSN: 1468-0289
In: Administrative Science Quarterly, Band 17, Heft 2, S. 286
In: Population: revue bimestrielle de l'Institut National d'Etudes Démographiques. French edition, Band 27, Heft 3, S. 550
ISSN: 0718-6568, 1957-7966
In: Journalism quarterly, Band 48, Heft 3, S. 486-493
Newspapers are judged the most important because of their greater completeness, but preference for the daily press is not indicative of greater trust. Radio and TV, with newspapers, enjoy an extraordinary degree of trust.
In: Population: revue bimestrielle de l'Institut National d'Etudes Démographiques. French edition, Band 26, Heft 2, S. 399
ISSN: 0718-6568, 1957-7966
In: Population: revue bimestrielle de l'Institut National d'Etudes Démographiques. French edition, Band 25, Heft 3, S. 678
ISSN: 0718-6568, 1957-7966
In: Theories of Urban Politics, S. 106-124
In: Indian journal of public administration, Band 14, Heft 3, S. 596-605
ISSN: 2457-0222
In: The Western political quarterly, Band 12, Heft 4, S. 1106
ISSN: 1938-274X
In: The American journal of sociology, Band 61, Heft 6, S. 610-620
ISSN: 1537-5390
In: Urban Planning, Band 3, Heft 3, S. 40-51
Urban strategies, representing stories of possible futures, often intervene in already established local communities and therefore call for a considerate urban intervention. This article utilises the ideas of Henri Lefebvre's socially produced space and of literature on stories involved in planning. Our empirical example tells a story of urban densification aspirations for an inner-city neighbourhood in Tampere, Finland. By combining the interviews of local people and planners with policy documents, we argue that planners' stories pay too little attention to the place and to local stories. Planners' abstract visions of the future and local stories building on lived experiences both draw meanings from the same place but have very different intentions. In our case, the consultation of the project started out wrong because the planners neglected a neighbourhood thick in symbolic meanings and the local stories' power in resistance. By understanding the place as polyphonic in its foundation, planners could learn about the symbolic elements and reasons for people's place attachment, and thus end up re-writing the place together. Urban interventions such as urban densification should connect to the place as part of its polyphonic historical continuum and acknowledge the residents' place attachments.
Although Ethiopia's economy has grown rapidly over the past decade and urbanization is increasing, the country's economic and spatial transformation has only just begun. Ethiopia's share of agriculture in GDP in 2006 (48 percent) was the highest in the world, and more than double the average for low income countries (20 percent). Likewise, Ethiopia remains one of the least urbanized countries in the world (16 percent), compared to the Sub-Sahara Africa average of 30 percent. Nonetheless, massive changes are underway. Agricultural growth accelerated in the second half of the first decade of the 2000s so that real agricultural GDP growth averaged 6.2 percent from 1998/99 to 2007/08. At the same time, Inflows of foreign aid, workers' remittances and private transfers that funded a surge in investment and boom in the construction sector. Measuring urbanization in terms of spatial agglomerations of people in and near cities of 50,000 or more, shows that urbanization growth rates between the population census years 1984 and 2007 are much higher (between 8 and 9 percent) than estimates based on official definitions of urban (4.2 percent). A surge in public investment has also helped bring about a new era for economic development. Road investments, particular those in transportation corridors in the highlands, have greatly increased connectivity, so that the number of people residing in or within three hours of a city of 50,000 or more, rose from 6.24 million in 1984 (15.5 percent of the population) to 38.7 million in 2007 (48.5 percent of the population). Moreover, massive investments in hydro-electric power have revolutionized Ethiopia's economy and opened up the potential for significant increases in productivity and output. Electricity per capita is expected to soon reach a level nearly 9 times the level of the 1960s, though it still remains far below the sub-Saharan Africa average. Similarly, fixed telephone line infrastructure more than doubled from 2003 to 2008; and cell phone subscription catapulted to 3.16 million subscribers in 2008 from only 50,000 in 2003. Finally, improvements in education and health are making significant impacts on the country's wellbeing and productivity. As Ethiopia moves forward, it faces key development policy decisions. Since the late 1990s, the country has followed an Agriculture Development Led Industrialization (ADLI) policy emphasizing investments to increase agricultural productivity and spur growth linkages with the rest of the economy. At the same time, government policy has effectively slowed rural-urban migration through regulations prohibiting sale of land, loss of land rights for those who leave rural areas, and registration requirements for new migrants. Allocation of public investments across sectors and across rural-urban space, together with land policies and various regulations on labor mobility, will be major determinants of the growth path of Ethiopia's economy and the extent of poverty reduction in the coming decade. ; Non-PR ; IFPRI2; GRP32; GRP36; ESSP II ; DSGD
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