How others have defined cities and urban boundaries #200
carlhiggs
started this conversation in
Team Posts
Replies: 0 comments
Sign up for free
to join this conversation on GitHub.
Already have an account?
Sign in to comment
-
We have been considering again the question of 'what is a city' -- and how to define the boundaries and population for them again. @eugenrb mentioned she would look into the city boundary question, and to help this I thought I'd share some links to some resources which I located recently when re-considering this 1.
Our project drew upon the European Commision's Global Human Settlements Layer Urban Centres Database (r2019a) ---- which is founded on their analysis of 'degree of urbanisation' https://ghsl.jrc.ec.europa.eu/degurba.php ---- with modelled temporal coverage for urban centre statistics (including areas and population) for 1975, 1990, 2000, and 2015
The UN population division has
UN Habitat has a 2020 paper on 'what is a city' (great up to date summary of the issues, and includes a proposal for a 'unified city definition'; as far as I can tell, that hasn't been operationalised anywhere yet!) https://unhabitat.org/sites/default/files/2020/06/city_definition_what_is_a_city.pdf
I just found some metadata at World Bank which also discusses how they defined a city and a metropolitan area (the latter is basically an urban agglomeration, or functional urban area --- GHSL also has a definition and database of FUAs incidentally): https://databank.worldbank.org/reports.aspx?source=2&type=metadata&series=EN.URB.LCTY#
Hope this is useful --- so the above isn't lost in an e-mail thread, I'll also add it as a discussion on the GitHub site!
Footnotes
Deepti and Jim were wanting to relate urban populations to Covid mortality -- and that has the same problem, how to consistently/comparably/meaningfully define urban boundaries ↩
Beta Was this translation helpful? Give feedback.
All reactions