The Internet and the rise of the new network cities, 1969 - 1999
The recent rapid growth of the Internet has avoided scrutiny from urban planners as little information is available from which to assess its impacts on cities and regions. As a result, explanations of the relationship between telecommunications and urban growth are overly simplistic, forecasting either the centralization of decisionmaking in so-called 'global' cities or wholesale urban dissolution. Based on two measurements of Internet geography -- domain name registrations and backbone networks -- this study finds that access to advanced communications technologies have broadly diffused across a wide group of medium-sized and large-sized metropolitan areas. Finally, the implications of these findings suggest a need to rethink global cities and a practical need to address the growing divide between network cities and the rest of the urban world.<p><a href="../../fulltext/b28/b2688.pdf"><img src="../../../gifs/pdf-art.gif" border=0 align=right alt="Download full text"></a>
Year of publication: |
2001
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Authors: | Townsend, Anthony M |
Published in: |
Environment and Planning B: Planning and Design. - Pion Ltd, London, ISSN 1472-3417. - Vol. 28.2001, 1, p. 39-58
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Publisher: |
Pion Ltd, London |
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