In this article, Nathan Keyfitz analyzes the urbanization of a national population that at first is entirely rural. The population is subjected to fixed rates of natural increase and migration and the evolution of its urban and rural subpopulations is studied by means of a pair of differential equations
Urban growth refers to the process of growth and decline of economic agglomerations. The pattern of ...
Representatives from 132 nations assembled in Vancouver in June of 1976 to convene HABITAT, the Unit...
Abstract. Innovations and innovators who bring new products to market are heralded as change agents ...
This paper is the third and last of a series seeking to shed some light on the question of whether a...
Roughly 1.8 billion people, 42 percent of the world's population, live in urban areas today. At the...
This paper is the second of a series intended to shed some light on the urbanization phenomenon. Its...
The six papers collected together in this issue of the INTERNATIONAL REGIONAL SCIENCE REVIEW conside...
This paper is the first of a series of three which attempt to shed some light on the urbanization ph...
This paper explores whether biological mechanisms, induced by the overpopulation of a territory, exe...
Roughly 1.8 billion people, 42 percent of the world's population, live in urban areas today, and thi...
This paper examines the population development of large urban regions. It discusses several hypothes...
The purpose of this report is to examine the process of urbanization from an analytical point of vie...
This past quarter century has witnessed unprecedented economic progress in the Third World. Yet majo...
Defence date: 19 May 2008Jury Members: Professor Frederick van der Ploeg, University of Oxford, (Sup...
The processes by which cities come to exist and grow have been of great interest to both academics a...
Urban growth refers to the process of growth and decline of economic agglomerations. The pattern of ...
Representatives from 132 nations assembled in Vancouver in June of 1976 to convene HABITAT, the Unit...
Abstract. Innovations and innovators who bring new products to market are heralded as change agents ...
This paper is the third and last of a series seeking to shed some light on the question of whether a...
Roughly 1.8 billion people, 42 percent of the world's population, live in urban areas today. At the...
This paper is the second of a series intended to shed some light on the urbanization phenomenon. Its...
The six papers collected together in this issue of the INTERNATIONAL REGIONAL SCIENCE REVIEW conside...
This paper is the first of a series of three which attempt to shed some light on the urbanization ph...
This paper explores whether biological mechanisms, induced by the overpopulation of a territory, exe...
Roughly 1.8 billion people, 42 percent of the world's population, live in urban areas today, and thi...
This paper examines the population development of large urban regions. It discusses several hypothes...
The purpose of this report is to examine the process of urbanization from an analytical point of vie...
This past quarter century has witnessed unprecedented economic progress in the Third World. Yet majo...
Defence date: 19 May 2008Jury Members: Professor Frederick van der Ploeg, University of Oxford, (Sup...
The processes by which cities come to exist and grow have been of great interest to both academics a...
Urban growth refers to the process of growth and decline of economic agglomerations. The pattern of ...
Representatives from 132 nations assembled in Vancouver in June of 1976 to convene HABITAT, the Unit...
Abstract. Innovations and innovators who bring new products to market are heralded as change agents ...