Relationships between cities and socio-technical energy, water, waste and transport networks are changing. Global Urbanism argues that this is not something that is happening naturally but is the product of social, economic, political and spatial processes and that these changes have profound implications for the mutual organisation of urbanism and resource flows and consequently for the shape of contemporary and future cities.
Author | Hodson, Mike |
Publisher | McGraw-Hill Education (UK) |
Release Date | 2010-06-01 |
ISBN | 0335237304 |
Pages | 182 pages |
Rating | 4/5 (02 users) |