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Posts Tagged ‘Urban’

Abstract: In July 1995 over 700 Chicago residents, most of them old and impoverished, died in a short but devastating heat wave. As part of a `social autopsy’ of this disaster that goes beyond natural factors to uncover the institutional forces that made the urban environment suddenly so lethal, this article examines the social production and lived experience of everyday urban isolation. Accounts from ethnographic investigations in the affected neighborhoods and of the city agencies entrusted with dealing with the issue are used to highlight four key conditions: (1) the increase in the number and proportion of people living alone, including seniors who outlive or become estranged from their social networks; (2) the fear of crime and the use of social withdrawal and reclusion as survival strategies; (3) the simultaneous degradation and fortification of urban public space, particularly in segregated neighborhoods that have lost major commercial establishments and other attractions that entice people out of their homes; (4) the political dysfunctions stemming from social service programs that treat citizens as consumers in a market for public goods despite a growing population of residents who lack access to the information and network ties necessary for such `smart shopping’ for city support. Together, these conditions create a formula for disaster that the 1995 heat wave actualized for the city of Chicago and might yet recur in other US metropolises.

A Sense of Place shortlink: http://wp.me/pISTJ-gp

Full Text: http://columbiauniversity.net/itc/hs/pubhealth/p6700/readings/klinenberg-dying.pdf

Klinenberg, Eric. Dying Alone: The Social Production of Urban Isolation.
Ethnography. December 2001 vol. 2no. 4 501-531
doi: 10.1177/14661380122231019E

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Abstract: This article examines the two major projects for transforming the city of Vladivostok during Soviet times. The first was to make it a Stalinist city during the 1930s, and would have resulted in an almost complete reconstruction of the historic Tsarist city into a model of socialist city planning.

The second project, beginning in the 1960s and continuing on into the 1980s, did transform the city dramatically according to mature socialist planning guidelines, and succeeded in making the city more livable than at any time in its past. This article compares the two plans and contrasts their successes and failures, their underlying goals and ideologies, and considers what the legacy of the two periods is for today’s post-Soviet city.

Full text: http://www.az.itu.edu.tr/azv8no1web/12-richardson-08-01.pdf

A Sense of Place shortlink: http://wp.me/pISTJ-fo

William Harrison Richardson, “Planning a model Soviet city: Transforming Vladivostok under Stalin and Brezhnev”  A|Z ITU Journal of the Faculty of Architecture volume 8 / no 1 – spring 2011

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Collection of data on economic variables, especially sub-national income levels, is problematic, due to various shortcomings in the data collection process. Additionally, the informal economy is often excluded from official statistics. Nighttime lights satellite imagery and the LandScan population grid provide an alternative means for measuring economic activity.

We have developed a model for creating a disaggregated map of estimated total (formal plus informal) economic activity for countries and states of the world. Regression models were developed to calibrate the sum of lights to official measures of economic activity at the sub-national level for China, India, Mexico, and the United States and at the national level for other countries of the world, and subsequently unique coefficients were derived. Multiplying the unique coefficients with the sum of lights provided estimates of total economic activity, which were spatially distributed to generate a spatially disaggregated 1 km2 map of total economic activity.

A Sense of Place permalink:   http://wp.me/pISTJ-b6

Full Text: http://www.benthamscience.com/open/togeogj/articles/V003/147TOGEOGJ.pdf

Shedding Light on the Global Distribution of Economic Activity

Tilottama Ghosh, Rebecca L. Powell, Christopher D. Elvidge, Kimberly E. Baugh ,Paul C. Sutton, Sharolyn Anderson

The Open Geography Journal, 2010, 3, 147-16

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Precis: La dictature instaurée en Espagne par le général Franco après la guerre civile (1936-1939) cherchait à démobiliser l’ensemble de la citoyenneté et, plus précisément, à provoquer la complète résignation de la population rurale objet de notre étude. Comme conséquence de cette prémisse, l’Historiographie caractérisa mécaniquement les attitudes qui démontraient la passivité de la paysannerie comme évidence d’une condition de « collaboration » et/ou « tolérance » envers le régime dictatorial de Franco.

On ne peut pas nier que les preuves d’inaction ne sont pas faciles à interpréter et que celles-ci confirment très souvent l’identification entre indifférence et adhésion au régime. Mais cela ne peut pas être compris comme un axiome. Le but de notre étude est d’analyser la passivité activée parfois au sein de la population rurale en tant que preuve de résistance, susceptible même d’être interprétée au niveau de formule de boycott des politiques et initiatives de l’État. (In French, Spanish, and English)

A Sense of Place permalink:  http://wp.me/pISTJ-b0

Full Text: http://amnis.revues.org/265

Ana Cabana Iglesia

Notes for a more complete understanding of the resistance practices of the rural population during the Franco dictatorship. 

Amnis. Revue contemporaine Europes/Ameriques  09/2010

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Abstract: Historically, in Canada, rural nurses provided health care that incorporated not only care of disease processes and acute illness but also care related to social and political aspects of need and advocacy.

With the advent of urbanized, acute hospital care and the focus of disease and cure, the role of the rural nurse was diminished. The purpose of this paper is to explore the role of the rural nurse within the context of the Canadian rural populations for whom they care and more specifically to examine how the effects of marginalization and health policy and decision making processes contributed and may continue to contribute negatively to marginalization.

The implications of not recognizing or marginalizing rural nurses may once again remove or negate their voice, affect their health care influence and impact the central role of the rural nurse in providing holistic care for and with the rural populations they serve.

A Sense of Place permalink: http://wp.me/pISTJ-8J

Full Text: http://www.rno.org/journal/index.php/online-journal/article/viewFile/228/274

Rural Nursing in Canada: A Voice Unheard

 Deirdre Jackman, RN, MN,  Florence Myrick, RN, BN, MScN, PhD,  Olive J. Yonge, RN, PhD, 

Online Journal of Rural Nursing and Health Care, vol. 10, no. 1, Spring 2010

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Abstract: Numerous studies have shown that the sex ratio at birth, defined as the relative number of male and female births, may be dramatically lower for small cohorts with high chemical exposures. Meanwhile, reports from different countries have shown recent declines in male births for the general population, perhaps implicating environmental factors. The sex ratio at birth has, therefore, been suggested by some as a sentinel environmental health indicator..

Geographical differentiations were found to be quite significant: the sex ratio is significantly higher in rural areas compared to urban centres or Greater Athens, and this difference is increasing over time. We offer a preliminary interpretation suggesting that these temporal and spatial trends may, at least partly, be attributed to chemicals’ exposure due to higher levels of indoor and outdoor air pollution and different consumption habits encountered in urban settings. 

Full Text: http://www.springerlink.com/content/q4722162501845r6/fulltext.html

A Sense of Place permalink: http://wp.me/pISTJ-4M

Title: Temporal and spatial trends in the sex ratio at birth in Greece, 1960–2006: exploring potential environmental factors

Authors: Alexandra Tragaki,  Katia Lasaridi

Department of Geography, Harokopion University of Athens

Population and Environment
A Journal of Interdisciplinary Studies

Received: 20 June 2008  Accepted: 3 April 2009  Published online: 2 May 2009

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