Representatives from 132 nations assembled in Vancouver in June of 1976 to convene HABITAT, the United Nations Conference on Human Settlements. The Conference was a global inquiry into solutions of the critical and urgent problems of human settlements created by the convergence of two historic events: unprecedentedly high rates of population growth and massive rural to urban migration. Rapidly growing populations strain health and education budgets, complicate efforts to utilize a nation's manpower efficiently, and exacerbate problems connected with the provision of adequate supplies and food, energy, water, housing, and transport and sanitary facilities. A better understanding of the dynamics and consequences of population growth, partic...
This paper is the second of a series intended to shed some light on the urbanization phenomenon. Its...
Roughly 1.8 billion people, 42 percent of the world's population, live in urban areas today, and thi...
In this report, the first of a series, Dr. Philip Rees of the University of Leeds analyzes populatio...
This past quarter century has witnessed unprecedented economic progress in the Third World. Yet majo...
Interest in human settlement systems and policies has been a critical part of urban-related work at ...
The evolution of human populations over time and space has been a central concern of many scholars i...
In this report, the author analyzes the regional demographic changes in Canada. The investigation on...
Meeting: Assemblée des intervenants nationaux, 3e, 16-17 déc. 1993, Ottawa, ON, CAMeeting: National ...
In this article, Nathan Keyfitz analyzes the urbanization of a national population that at first is ...
In this report, Professor Marc Termote of the Institut National de la Recherche Scientifique du Queb...
The six papers collected together in this issue of the INTERNATIONAL REGIONAL SCIENCE REVIEW conside...
This issue of IIASA REPORTS describes the work of IIASA's Human Settlements and Services (HSS) area....
This paper examines the population development of large urban regions. It discusses several hypothes...
Roughly 1.8 billion people, 42 percent of the world's population, live in urban areas today. At the...
Outlines the major components of human settlement problems: the demographics of rapid urbanization a...
This paper is the second of a series intended to shed some light on the urbanization phenomenon. Its...
Roughly 1.8 billion people, 42 percent of the world's population, live in urban areas today, and thi...
In this report, the first of a series, Dr. Philip Rees of the University of Leeds analyzes populatio...
This past quarter century has witnessed unprecedented economic progress in the Third World. Yet majo...
Interest in human settlement systems and policies has been a critical part of urban-related work at ...
The evolution of human populations over time and space has been a central concern of many scholars i...
In this report, the author analyzes the regional demographic changes in Canada. The investigation on...
Meeting: Assemblée des intervenants nationaux, 3e, 16-17 déc. 1993, Ottawa, ON, CAMeeting: National ...
In this article, Nathan Keyfitz analyzes the urbanization of a national population that at first is ...
In this report, Professor Marc Termote of the Institut National de la Recherche Scientifique du Queb...
The six papers collected together in this issue of the INTERNATIONAL REGIONAL SCIENCE REVIEW conside...
This issue of IIASA REPORTS describes the work of IIASA's Human Settlements and Services (HSS) area....
This paper examines the population development of large urban regions. It discusses several hypothes...
Roughly 1.8 billion people, 42 percent of the world's population, live in urban areas today. At the...
Outlines the major components of human settlement problems: the demographics of rapid urbanization a...
This paper is the second of a series intended to shed some light on the urbanization phenomenon. Its...
Roughly 1.8 billion people, 42 percent of the world's population, live in urban areas today, and thi...
In this report, the first of a series, Dr. Philip Rees of the University of Leeds analyzes populatio...