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European Cities in the World City Network, 2010. Peter Taylor. Background. Globalization as space of flows World/global cities as nodes Interlocking network model Indirect measurement Service values matrix Network connectivities Network structure. Intensive globalization strategy.
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European Cities in the World City Network, 2010 Peter Taylor
Background • Globalization as space of flows • World/global cities as nodes • Interlocking network model • Indirect measurement • Service values matrix • Network connectivities • Network structure
Intensive globalization strategy COMMAND CITIES: 9.8 - New York 4.8 - Chicago 1.9 – London 1.4 - Pittsburgh 1.4 - Los Angeles 1.3 – Toronto 1.1 – Boston 0.8 – Philadelphia 0.7 – Miami 0.7 – Washington 0.6 – Columbus 0.6 – Detroit 0.5 – Baltimore 0.5 – San Francisco 0.4 – Seattle 0.4 – Charlotte 0.4 – Seoul 0.4 - Dallas
Extensive globalization strategy COMMAND CITIES: 8.2 – New York 3.3 – London 1.9 – Chicago 1.1 – Paris 0.4 - Brussels
Pacific Asian strategy COMMAND CITIES: 5.3 – Tokyo 1.9 – Beijing 1.2 – Seoul 0.9 – London 0.7 – Singapore 0.5 – Paris 0.5 – Melbourne 0.4 - Toronto
Americas strategy COMMAND CITIES: 4.7 – New York 1.0 – Toronto 0.6 – Chicago 0.6 – Dublin 0.5 – Atlanta 0.5 – Charlotte 0.5 – Brussels 0.5 – Zurich 0.5 – Boston 0.4 – Baltimore 0.4 – London 0.4 - Dallas
European Strategy COMMAND CITIES: 3.1 – London 1.1 - Milan 1.0 – Boston 1.0 – Madrid 0.7 – Munich 0.5 – Trieste 0.5 – Frankfurt 0.5 – Turin 0.5 – Paris 0.5 – Istanbul 0.4 – Chicago 0.4 - Florence
Australian/Commonwealth strategy COMMAND CITIES: 1.5 – Sydney 1.3 – Melbourne 0.6 – Munich 0.5 – Johannesburg 0.5 - London
Latin American strategy COMMAND CITIES: 1.3 – Sao Paulo 0.9 – Madrid 0.7 - Brasilia
Canada/Commonwealth strategy COMMAND CITIES: 1.6 – Toronto 0.6 – Boston 0.5 - Mumbai
Scandinavian strategy COMMAND CITIES: 1.3 – Stockholm 0.5 - Oslo
China strategy COMMAND CITIES: 0.7 – Shenzhen 0.7 – Shanghai 0.5 – Beijing 0.4 – Florence 0.4 - Singapore