Global city

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A global city or world city is a concept promoted by the geography department at Loughborough University which postulates that globalisation can be broken down in terms of strategic geographic locales that see global processes being created, facilitated and enacted. The most complex of these entities is the "global city", whereby the linkages binding a city have a direct and tangible effect on global affairs through more than just socio-economic means, with influence in terms of culture, or politics.[1] The terminology of "global city", as opposed to megacity, is thought to have been first coined by Saskia Sassen in reference to London, New York and Tokyo in her 1991 work The Global City.[2]

Contents

General characteristics

It has been argued that global cities are those sharing the following characteristics:[citation needed]

To some, London, New York City, Paris, and Tokyo have been traditionally considered the 'big four' world cities – not coincidentally, also serve as symbols of global capitalism.[citation needed] However, many people have their own personal lists, and any two lists are likely to differ based on cultural background, values, and experience.

In certain countries, the rise of suburbia and the ongoing migration of manufacturing jobs to these countries has led to significant urban decay. Therefore, to boost urban regeneration, tourism, and revenue, the goal of building a "world-class" city has recently become an obsession with the governments of some mid-size cities and their constituents.

The phenomenon of world-city building has also been observed in Buenos Aires, Frankfurt, Mexico City, Montréal, Santiago, Sydney and Toronto: each of these cities has emerged as large and influential.[citation needed]

Table of the cities of the world

For selected criteria

Rank Population of city (proper) Population of metropolitan area Percentage foreign born[4] Cost of living[5] Metro systems by annual passenger ridership Annual passenger air traffic (2002)[6] Number of billionaires (US Dollars)[7][8][9] Gross Metropolitan Product[10]
1 Mumbai Tokyo Miami Moscow Tokyo London New York City Tokyo
2 Karachi Seoul Toronto Seoul Moscow Tokyo Los Angeles New York
3 Delhi Mexico City Los Angeles Tokyo Seoul Chicago Moscow Los Angeles
4 São Paulo New York City Vancouver Hong Kong Mexico City New York City London Chicago
5 Shanghai São Paulo New York City London New York City Atlanta Hong Kong Paris
6 Moscow Mumbai Singapore Osaka Paris Paris Chicago London
7 Seoul Delhi Sydney Geneva London Los Angeles San Francisco Osaka-Kobe
8 İstanbul Shanghai Abidjan Copenhagen Osaka Dallas- Fort Worth Paris Mexico City
9 Mexico City Jakarta London Zürich Hong Kong Frankfurt Dallas Philadelphia
10 Tokyo Moscow Paris Oslo/New York City Singapore Houston Tokyo Washington

GaWC Inventory of World Cities (1999 Edition)

An attempt to define and categorise world cities was made in 1999 by the Globalization and World Cities Study Group and Network (GaWC), based primarily at Loughborough University in Loughborough, Leicestershire, England. The roster was outlined in the GaWC Research Bulletin 5[11] and ranked cities based on provision of "advanced producer services" such as accountancy, advertising, finance and law, by international corporations. The GaWC inventory identifies three levels of world cities and several sub-ranks.

Note that this roster generally denotes cities in which there are offices of certain multinational companies providing financial and consulting services rather than other cultural, political, and economic centres. There is a schematic map of GaWC cities at their website.[12]

Alpha world cities (full service world cities)

12 points:

10 points:

Refer to Official GaWC List.[13]

Beta world cities (major world cities)

9 points:

8 points:

7 points:

Gamma world cities (minor world cities)

6 points

5 points:

4 points:

Evidence of world city formation

Strong evidence

3 points

Some evidence

2 points:

Minimal evidence

1 point:

GaWC Leading World Cities (2004 Edition)

An attempt to redefine and recategorise leading world cities was made by PJ Taylor at GaWC in 2004.
This ranking list is referred to as the Official GaWC List.[14]

Global Cities

Well rounded global cities

  1. Very large contribution: Flag of United Kingdom London and Flag of United States New York City.
    Smaller contribution and with cultural bias: Flag of United States Los Angeles, Flag of France Paris and Flag of United States San Francisco.
  2. Incipient global cities: Flag of Netherlands Amsterdam, Flag of United States Boston, Flag of United States Chicago, Flag of Spain Madrid, Flag of Italy Milan, Flag of Russia Moscow, Flag of Canada Toronto.

Global niche cities - specialised global contributions

  1. Economic: Flag of Hong Kong Hong Kong, Flag of Singapore Singapore, and Flag of Japan Tokyo.
  2. Political and social: Flag of Belgium Brussels, Flag of Switzerland Geneva, Flag of France Strasbourg and Flag of United States Washington.

World Cities

Subnet articulator cities

  1. Cultural: Flag of Germany Berlin, Flag of Denmark Copenhagen, Flag of Australia Melbourne, Flag of Germany Munich, Flag of Norway Oslo, Flag of Italy Rome, Flag of Sweden Stockholm.
    Political: Flag of Thailand Bangkok, Flag of People's Republic of China Beijing, Flag of Austria Vienna.
  2. Social: Flag of Philippines Manila, Flag of Kenya Nairobi, Flag of Canada Ottawa.

Worldwide leading cities

  1. Primarily economic global contributions: Flag of Germany Frankfurt, Flag of United States Miami, Flag of Germany Munich, Flag of Japan Osaka, Flag of Singapore Singapore, Flag of Australia Sydney, Flag of Switzerland Zürich
  2. Primarily non-economic global contributions: Flag of Côte d'Ivoire Abidjan, Flag of Ethiopia Addis Ababa, Flag of United States Atlanta, Flag of Switzerland Basle, Flag of Spain Barcelona, Flag of Egypt Cairo, Flag of United States Denver, Flag of Zimbabwe Harare, Flag of France Lyon, Flag of Philippines Manila, Flag of Mexico Mexico City, Flag of India Mumbai, Flag of India New Delhi, Flag of People's Republic of China Shanghai.

Global Cities Conference 2006

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This conference[15] took place at Liverpool Hope University, starting on 29 June 2006 and chaired by Dr. Lawrence Phillips of the Global Cities Conference at the university. Its aim was to establish what is meant by a 'global city', by examining criteria such as images, narratives, economics, planning and people's experiences. It also looked at whether the perceived 'big four' — London, New York, Paris and Tokyo — are in fact the only candidates for global city status, or if they should in fact be joined by fast-growing cities in Asia or the developing world.

Other criteria

The GaWC list is based on specific criteria and, thus, may not include other cities of global significance or elsewhere on the spectrum. For example, cities with the following:

See also

References

  1. ^ Sassen, Saskia - The global city: strategic site/new frontier
  2. ^ Sassen, Saskia - The Global City: New York, London, Tokyo. (1991) - Princeton University Press. ISBN 0-691-07063-6
  3. ^ PERMANENT MISSIONS TO THE UNITED NATIONS, UN, 29 April 2003
  4. ^ a b Chapter 5: Globalization and cultural choicePDF (352 KiB), "2004 Human Development Report" (page 99), UNDP, 2004
  5. ^ a b 2006 worldwide cost of living survey results released, Mercer, 26 June 2006
  6. ^ http://www.iaurif.org/en/doc/studies/airports/INTRO.pdf
  7. ^ INTERNATIONAL PRIVATE WEALTH MANAGEMENTPDF, International Financial Services, December 2004
  8. ^ Forbes reports billionaire boom, BBC, 10 March 2006
  9. ^ 500 richest in Russia, Finance Magazine, published by RBC. February 2006.
  10. ^ PriceWaterhouseCoopers, "UK Economic Outlook, March 2007", page 5. "Table 1.2 – Top 30 urban agglomeration GDP rankings in 2005 and illustrative projections to 2020 (using UN definitions and population estimates)" (PDF). Retrieved on 2007-03-09.
  11. ^ GaWC Research Bulletin 5, GaWC, Loughborough University, 28 July 1999
  12. ^ The World According to GaWC, GaWC, Loughborough University
  13. ^ Inventory of World Cities, GaWC, Loughborough University
  14. ^ Leading World Cities, GaWC, Loughborough University
  15. ^ 2006 Global Cities Conference
  16. ^ Chapter 9: Urban DataPDF (196 KiB), "World Resources 1998-99", WRI, 1998
  17. ^ City Profiles, UN
  18. ^ Mobility 2001PDF (1.59 MiB), WBCSD
  19. ^ WORLD URBANIZATION PROSPECTS: THE 2003 REVISIONPDF (3.73 MiB), UN, 2004
  20. ^ Urban Characteristics,City Level, 1993PDF (61.6 KiB), "World Resources 1998-99", WRI, 1998.
  21. ^ Global Urban Indicators Database 2 (1998 data) (data sets in .ZIP), UN-HABITAT
  22. ^ World Indices, Bloomberg
  23. ^ J.V. Beaverstock, World City Networks 'From Below', GaWC, Loughborough University, 29 September 2005
  24. ^ World-wide quality of living survey, Mercer, 10 April 2006
  25. ^ The city development indexPDF, "THE STATE OF THE WORLD'S CITIES REPORT 2001", UN-HABITAT, 21 June 2006
  26. ^ The World's Billionaires, Forbes, 2005
  27. ^ Mapping the Global Network Economy on the Basis of Air Passenger Transport Flows, GaWC, Loughborough University, 8 December 2004
  28. ^ Estimated Ridership of the World’s Largest Public Transit Systems, 1998
  29. ^ COMMUTER RAIL (SUBURBAN RAIL, REGIONAL RAIL) IN THE UNITED STATES: INTERNATIONAL CONTEXTPDF (218 KiB), October 2003
  30. ^ Traffic Intensity by International Urban Area: 1990
  31. ^ Largest seaports of the world
  32. ^ The World's Best Skylines
  33. ^ [1]PDF (registration required)
  34. ^ K. O'Connor, International Students and Global Cities, GaWC, Loughborough University, 17 February 2005
  35. ^ World Heritage List, UNESCO
  36. ^ P. De Groote, Economic and Tourism Aspects of the Olympic Games, GaWC, Loughborough University, 21 September 2005

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