when did the world cross the majority urban threshold?
2007
significance of “territorial stigmatization”
eg. downtown eastside
- very dangerous, must be careful about “blocking off” areas of the city
- how is it that social problems become spatially concentrated in certain urban places?
significance of crossing majority urban threshold
territorial stigmatization
blaming places for social problems that may be caused by things going on elsewhere
“insider as insighter” doctrine
“insider as insighter” definition
You have to be one to understand one. That is, outsiders cannot truly understand insiders. This doctrine holds that individuals have a monopoly on knowledge or privileged access to understanding by virtue of their group membership or social position, or lack of it.
transcending the “insider as insighter” doctrine
difference between acquaintance with and knowledge of urban life
positivism
A theory of knowledge that seeks causal explanations by analyzing the relations among observed phenomena
criticisms of positivism and rational extraction
why positivism and rational extraction remain important
importance of the 548+ cities with over 1 million
some mega-cities have more people than nation-states
implications of the Heisenberg uncertainty principle for urban studies
Chicago school of urban sociology
a group of scholars at the University of Chicago who used positivism to claim scientific credibility for a new discipline. The Chicago School approach emphasized careful, objective observation, and the search for general rules of how cities developed. Ernest Burgess, for example, proposed a “concentric zone” model to generalize where different groups lived inside the city. The Chicago School approach was used in cities throughout the world, and dominated social inquiry from the 1920s through the 1960s.
Global network university (John Sexton)
Instead of waiting for the best international students to apply, N.Y.U. will go to them, students enter the university through three ‘portal campuses’: N.Y.U. New York; N.Y.U. Shanghai; and N.Y.U. Abu Dhabi. They leave the portals to spend up to three semesters circulating through the school’s thirteen study-away sites, situated in ‘idea capitals’ like Berlin, Accra, Buenos Aires, and Sydney.
“an extrapolation of the theories of the Jesuit priest Pierre Teilhard de Chardin, who predicted that people around the world would become increasingly interconnected: a membrane called the ‘noösphere,’ self-aware and god-like, would envelope the earth. ‘We – humankind – find ourselves at an inflection point, a critical threshold,’ Sexton has written.’”
How does the development of the interdisciplinary field of urban studies fit into the wider history of academic disciplines?
hypothesis example
because there are no homeless shelters in Shaughnessy, the council must have fought attempts to build any
V. Gordon Childe
(1892 - 1957)
Childe saw the agricultural surplus of the fertile river floodplains of Mesopotamia as the key to understanding the social and cultural development of an urban civilization. In his famous synthesis of 1950, “the Urban Revolution,” he outlines ten criteria for identifying a true urban civilization.
Childe’s materialist perspective on urbanization came to be summarized as the “POET” complex:
Population
Organization
Environment
Technology
Çatal Hüyük
Archaeological excavations have provided evidence of cities, or at least “proto-urbanization,” 7,500 BCE
What was the most important evidence that helped Martin Bernal re-think our conventional wisdom about ancient Greece?
Black Athena: connections between languages revealed that Greece was settled by Egyptians and Semites, rejected by Eurocentrists
factors that have re-shaped knowledge about first cities
“Future of the Past”
means that factors in the future reshape our knowledge of the past
Ferdinand Tönnies