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An urbanization bomb? Population growth and social disorder in cities

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TLDR
In this article, the authors investigated how population growth affects patterns of public unrest in urban centers within the context of crucial intervening factors like democracy, poverty, economic shocks, and ongoing civil conflict.
Abstract
For the first time in history, the majority of the world population now lives in cities. Global urbanization will continue at high speed; the world's urban population is projected to increase by more than 3 billion people between 2010 and 2050. Some of this increase will be the result of high urban fertility rates and reclassification of rural land into urban areas, but a significant portion of future urbanization will be caused by rural-to-urban migration. This migration is expected to be particularly prevalent in countries and regions most affected by the changing climate. While urban populations generally enjoy a higher quality of life, many cities in the developing world have large slums with populations that are largely excluded from access to resources, jobs, and public services. In the environmental security literature, great rural resource scarcity, causing rural to urban migration, is seen as an important source of violent conflict. This study investigates how population growth affects patterns of public unrest in urban centers within the context of crucial intervening factors like democracy, poverty, economic shocks. It utilizes a newly collected event dataset of urban social disturbance covering 55 major cities in Asia and Sub-Saharan Africa since 1960. The empirical analysis provides little support for the notion that high and increasing urban population pressure leads to a higher risk or frequency of social disorder. Instead, we find that urban disorder is primarily associated with a lack of consistent political institutions, economic shocks, and ongoing civil conflict.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Why Men Rebel

R. D. Jessop
- 01 May 1971 - 
TL;DR: Why Men Rebel was first published in 1970 on the heels of a decade of political violence and protest not only in remote corners of Africa and Southeast Asia, but also at home in the United States as discussed by the authors.
Journal ArticleDOI

The population bomb.

Nigel Williams
- 08 Jul 2008 - 
TL;DR: Worries about the growth in the human population go back to Malthus and beyond, but a book first published 40 years ago is having a new resonance.
Journal ArticleDOI

Rural Marginalisation and the Role of Social Innovation; A Turn Towards Nexogenous Development and Rural Reconnection

Bettina Bock
- 01 Sep 2016 - 
TL;DR: In this article, three examples of rural social innovation are used to distil specific features of social innovation and compare them with other concepts and approaches to rural development, concluding that it is time to go beyond earlier ideas of exogenous versus (neo-)endogenous development and introduce the idea of nexogenous development with socio-political reconnection as an engine of revitalisation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Resilience trade-offs: addressing multiple scales and temporal aspects of urban resilience

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors show how the framework of urban resilience should be related to wider sustainability challenges, including climate change and natural hazard threats, unsustainable urban metabolism patterns and increasing social inequalities in cities.
References
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Book

Climate Change 2001: Impacts, Adaptation, and Vulnerability

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors set the stage for impact, adaptation, and vulnerability assessment of climate change in the context of sustainable development and equity, and developed and applied scenarios in Climate Change Impact, Adaptation, and Vulnerability Assessment.
Book

Climate change 2007 : impacts, adaptation and vulnerability

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a cross-chapter case study on climate change and sustainability in natural and managed systems and assess key vulnerabilities and the risk from climate change, and assess adaptation practices, options, constraints and capacity.
Book

The Clash of Civilizations and the Remaking of World Order

TL;DR: Based on the author's seminal article in "Foreign Affairs", Samuel P. Huntington's "The Clash of Civilizations and the Remaking of World Order" is a provocative and prescient analysis of the state of world politics after the fall of communism.
Posted Content

Greed and Grievance in Civil War

TL;DR: Collier and Hoeffler as discussed by the authors compare two contrasting motivations for rebellion: greed and grievance, and show that many rebellions are linked to the capture of resources (such as diamonds in Angola and Sierra Leone, drugs in Colombia, and timber in Cambodia).
Journal ArticleDOI

Global Change and the Ecology of Cities

TL;DR: Urban ecology integrates natural and social sciences to study these radically altered local environments and their regional and global effects of an increasingly urbanized world.
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