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Chapter 19. Urbanization. Chapter Outline . Preindustrial Cities Industrialization and Urbanization Metropolis Suburbs Urban Neighborhoods Segregation in World Perspective Theories of Urban Impact. Urbanization. Migration of people from the countryside to the city.
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Chapter 19 Urbanization
Chapter Outline • Preindustrial Cities • Industrialization and Urbanization • Metropolis • Suburbs • Urban Neighborhoods • Segregation in World Perspective • Theories of Urban Impact
Urbanization • Migration of people from the countryside to the city. • In 1900 fewer than 40% of Americans and Canadians lived in urban areas. • Today, 79% of Americans and 78% of Canadians are urban residents, and only about 1% live on farms.
Preindustrial Cities • Preindustrial cities were small, filthy, disease-ridden, crowded, and disorderly. • They contained no more than 5,000–10,000 inhabitants. • Large national capitals usually had no more than 40,000 inhabitants and rarely more than 60,000.
Why People Lived in Preindustrial Cities • Cities offered many people a chance to increase their incomes. • Cities offered the prospect of a more interesting and stimulating life. • Cities enticed those in pursuit of “vice.”
Two Basic Forms of Modern Metropolises • Fixed-rail metropolis -made the center of the city the focal point. • Freeway metropolis - decentralized the metropolis.
Commuting • It takes the average American 25.5 minutes to go from home to work. • 76% commute to work alone in their private vehicle. • 12% carpool to work. • 5% take public transportation to work. • 3% walk to work.
Gove’s Study of of Crowding • Studied 2,000 homes that varied in the number of persons per room. • The more persons per room, the more people complained of a lack of privacy and of too great demands on them by others. • People responded to crowding by withdrawing physically and emotionally.
Gove’s Study of of Crowding • People in crowded homes had poorer mental health. • Members of crowded homes had poor social relations with one another. • Child care in crowded homes was poor. • The effects of crowding began to show up when there was more than one person per room in a household.