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Metropolitan area

About: Metropolitan area is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 26029 publications have been published within this topic receiving 385648 citations. The topic is also known as: metro & metro area.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Wang et al. as mentioned in this paper investigated the processes and mechanisms of urban land expansion in the Nanjing metropolitan area, which is a major city in the Yangtze River Delta (YRD).

114 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
Casey J. Dawkins1
TL;DR: Black-white residential segregation, while on the decline, still persists at high levels in most US metropolitan areas as mentioned in this paper, despite decades of research into the underlying causes of black-white residen...
Abstract: Black-white residential segregation, while on the decline, still persists at high levels in most US metropolitan areas. Despite decades of research into the underlying causes of black-white residen...

114 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors provide an overview of the new regional and metropolitan area redistribution patterns by evaluating the pervasiveness of the post-1970 redistribution reversals as well as shifts in the demographic components of change that underlie them.
Abstract: This volume is 1 of a series aimed at converting the vast statistical yield of the 1980 US census into authoritative analyses of major trends and changes in American life. This volumes main objective is to interpret the redistribution patterns of the 1970s and early 1980s in light of the changing social and economic contexts for redistribution that emerged during this period taking cognizance of the major explanations and theories that have been offered to account for these new patterns. Part 1 comprising chapters 3-6 pertains to redistribution across regions and metropolitan areas. This portion of the monograph provides an overview of the new regional and metropolitan area redistribution patterns by evaluating the pervasiveness of the post-1970 redistribution reversals as well as shifts in the demographic components of change that underlie them. It examines the impact of 1970-1980 growth and decline on population and household subgroups in various areas and undertakes a separate examination of redistribution patterns determinants and consequences for the black population. Part 2 of this monograph comprising chapters 7-11 evaluates post-1970 shifts in central city-suburban redistribution within the nations 39 largest metropolitan areas. It also documents aggregate population changes for central cities and suburbs along with their underlying demographic components. It devotes the most attention to shifts in the racial and socioeconomic selectivities that have become associated with post-1970 suburbanization and their impacts on the central city. It provides careful evaluation of selective post-1970 city-suburb redistribution tendencies with the aid of rich area-based summary data from the 1970 and 1980 decennial censuses. It evaluates the extent to which the 1970s shifts in racial segregation the decline of full-family households and the rise of the so-called service city have effected beneficial demographic changes in large central cities. The final chapter ties together this studys major results and underlying perspectives. It reviews the most important influences on redistribution in the post-1970 period and speculates about future redistribution tendencies that could emerge.

114 citations

01 Jan 2007
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors define and present a comprehensive set of metrics for five dynamic attributes of urban spatial structure commonly associated with "sprawl": (a) the extension of the area of cities beyond the walkable range and the emergence of "endless" cities; (b) the persistent decline in urban densities and the increasing consumption of land resources by urban dwellers; (c) ongoing suburbanization and the decreasing share of the population living and working in metropolitan centers; (d) the diminished contiguity of the built-up areas of cities and the increased fragmentation
Abstract: We define and present a comprehensive set of metrics for five dynamic attributes of urban spatial structure commonly associated with ‘sprawl’: (a) the extension of the area of cities beyond the walkable range and the emergence of ‘endless’ cities; (b) the persistent decline in urban densities and the increasing consumption of land resources by urban dwellers; (c) ongoing suburbanization and the decreasing share of the population living and working in metropolitan centers; (d) the diminished contiguity of the built-up areas of cities and the increased fragmentation of open space in and around them; and (e) the increased compactness of cities as the areas between their fingerlike extensions are filled in. We also introduce several metrics for key manifestations of sprawl. We present these metrics as well as actual calculations of these metrics for two cities: Bangkok and Minneapolis. A forthcoming paper will present similar results for a global sample of 120 cities.

114 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors focused on the Athens metropolitan area, the capital of Greece, discussing the potential role of a typical rural Mediterranean landscape dominated by olive groves, in urban containment and peri-urban conservation of biodiversity and local traditions.
Abstract: Dispersed urbanization has expanded into rural land worldwide. The present work focused on the Athens’ metropolitan area, the capital of Greece, discussing the potential role of a typical rural Mediterranean landscape dominated by olive groves, in urban containment and peri-urban conservation of biodiversity and local traditions. Having a great cultural, culinary and aesthetic importance, olive groves characterize Mediterranean peri-urban landscapes in a distinctive way. This study identifies processes of urban dispersion and changes in the ‘olive landscape’ in the study area, proposing new ideas for a sustainable land management in metropolitan contexts that have recently undergone processes of territorial transformation toward urban sprawl, under the effect of socioeconomic disturbances, including economic crisis.

114 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
20232,189
20224,773
20211,006
20201,173
20191,025
20181,191