Population Change in Urban Areas (DP IB Geography)
Revision Note
Urbanisation
More people now live in towns and cities than in rural areas
Urbanisation varies across the globe and is the increase in the percentage of a population living in urban areas
Urban settlements differ from rural ones in terms of:
Way of life: faster-paced
Size: larger
Density of buildings and people: compact and high
Economy and employment: finance, service, and manufacturing
HICs show the highest levels of urbanisation, with the lowest levels in Africa and Southeast Asia
The world population doubled between 1950 and 2015, but the urban population more than trebled due to:
The decline of industry in developed countries, as the industry moved overseas to emerging countries (cheaper workforce, incentives, tax breaks, etc)
This led to industrial growth in emerging countries and 'pulled' people from rural regions to urban areas, with the hope of a better life and employment
High rates of urbanisation occur in LICs because:
Most new economic development is concentrated in the big cities
Push-pull factors lead to high rates of rural-to-urban migration
Cities are experiencing higher levels of natural increase
Urbanisation pathway
The differences between HICs and LICs can be shown in a pathway over time
Countries become more urban as they develop economically
As they move through the stages, the pace begins to slow and begins to flatten out or decline as counter-urbanisation gains speed
A diagram to show the urbanisation pathway
Natural Increase
Natural increase is the difference between the number of births and the number of deaths
It accounts for approximately 60% of urban growth
This is the result of decreased death rates and higher birth rates
Death rates are lower because:
The population has a younger average age than in rural areas
Healthcare tends to be better in urban areas
The more youthful population leads to higher birth rates because more people are of childbearing age
Examiner Tip
Do not confuse urbanisation with urban growth.
Urban growth is an increase in the population size of an urban area.
Urbanisation is an increase in the proportion of people living in urban areas.
For example, on one street, there were 5 new migrants, 10 births and 2 deaths. The urbanisation increase is 5 people because migrants have moved into an urban area. The natural increase is 8 people because the migrants are not included. If the migrants then had children, then the children would be included in the natural increase rate.
Centripetal Population Movements
Centripetal movements
Centripetal movement refers to the movement of people towards the urban centre, including:
Rural-urban migration
Urban redevelopment
Re-urbanisation
Rural-urban migration
Rural-urban migration is one type of movement into the city
The causes of rural-urban migration are push and pull factors
The pull factors are those things which attract people to the cities from rural areas, including:
Better housing
Improved sanitation
Jobs
Better services
The push factors are those things which are causing people to leave rural areas, including:
A lack of jobs
Poor housing
Lack of sanitation
Fewer services
Lack of infrastructure
Urban redevelopment (gentrification)
Redevelopment transforms areas of a city from low-value to high-value
This is also known as gentrification
It is usually the result of middle-class (higher-income) residents moving into an area to redevelop the buildings
This process attracts more people with higher incomes as well as businesses
Urban redevelopment changes the population structure of the area
Urban redevelopment also has disadvantages, including:
The poorer existing population being forced out due to rising house prices
Re-urbanisation
The movement of people back into the cities from the surrounding area
Movement is the result of several factors, including:
Increase in jobs
Regeneration of older areas either through rebuilding or redevelopment (factories into spacious apartments)
Improvements in air quality
Improvements in safety
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