L20: A world of cities Flashcards
What is the world cities/global cities approach and what does it tell us about how the world works?
Most geographers see global cities in terms of command and control economies. This means we see the world through a very capitalistic lens
What ways are there to think about how cities are global beyond the world/global cities approach?
APS, Impact on culture, purely by size
What are ‘mobilities’ and ‘policy mobilities’ and on which practices and politics of urban-global connection do these concepts shed light?
Community
bifurcated global city
Advanced Producer Services (APS)
Ecosystem of services needed by transnational corporations to operate efficiently (ex. banks, marketing, law firms)
- cluster in bug cities
globalizing cities
Term that indicates that globalization is processes not an end, effects all cities
Citadel geography
Fortified area in a city, typically citadel vs. ghetto division
Policy mobilities
Study how a policy is made in a global context. Policies travel through networks. They are shaped and conditioned by the political context , need to look at them in a global context
Mobilities approach
The change from studying the world as a snapshot to studying movement and how it affects people’s lives. This means studying urban transportation, migration, etc.
Examples of ancient ‘global’ cities
- Timbuktu: Salt and gold industry in the 16th century
- Tenochtitan: Huge city in Mexico in the 13th-15th century
- Cahokia: Center for North American trade between 1000-1150
- Melaka: center for spice in the 14th-15th century
What are the multiple definitions of a “global city”
largest? Cities with religious/cultural significance? Political influence? Oppositional struggle?
Global cities scholarship
Emerged in the 1980’s and for most urbanist’s global cities are “command and control” with sites for transnational corporations to have head quarters
Characteristics of “global cities”
- integrated into the global economy
- sites of power
- clear urban hierarchy
- have clusters of transnational elite professionals
- divide and tense
World cities vs. Global cities
World city: seen in terms of powerful politics, development of trade, culture and education
Global city: considered to be a center which includes not only trade, influential political activity, educational and cultural attributes but also located in there headquarters of TNCs and international organizations, prevailing financial and service sectors, information technology, innovations, sports mega-events hosting.
Saskia Sassen
- Very influential in global cities scholarship
- work focusses on which cities have major clusters of aps networks and how they are generated
- argues against myth of universal benefit
- argues that myth of ongoing erosion of significance of place and distance is controlled by aps firms
Critiques of the dominant global cities approach
Jennifer Robinson’s 3 main critiques of global cities research
What are some ways in which Montreal could be understood as “global”? What is “global” about it?