1 / 29

Urban Regional Identity and Traits: Delhi and its Peripheral Region

Urban Regional Identity and Traits: Delhi and its Peripheral Region. Debnath Mookherjee* Manie (H.S.) Geyer** Eugene Hoerauf * IGU Urban Geography Commission Canterbury UK Christ Church University August 14-20, 2011

devon
Télécharger la présentation

Urban Regional Identity and Traits: Delhi and its Peripheral Region

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Urban Regional Identity and Traits: Delhi and its Peripheral Region Debnath Mookherjee* Manie (H.S.) Geyer** Eugene Hoerauf* IGU Urban Geography Commission Canterbury UK Christ Church University August 14-20, 2011 *Western Washington University, Bellingham, WA 98225, USA ** Stellenbosch University, Stellenbosch 7602, South Africa

  2. Conceptual Background • Core/Periphery – The Semantics of Peripheral Relevance • Dimensions –Spatial / Aspatial • The Centricity Continuum – From Monocentric to Polycentric • Agreements & Ambiguities – Scale, Definition, Disciplinary Approaches, Measurements References: Potter (2001), Copus (2001), Geyer (2006)

  3. Agreements & Ambiguities • Broad Consensus (Developed Countries) -- The ‘Demise’ of Monocentricity -- Decentralization of Economic Activities -- Implications of Changes in the ‘Demographic Regime’ -- Mono/Polycentricity – A Continuum, Not an ‘Either /Or’ -- Morphological & Functional Dimensions

  4. Agreements & Ambiguities(Cont.) • Ambiguities –‘No Real Consensus,’ e.g., -- Definitions of Polycentricity, ‘What it Really Means’ -- Scales -- Polycentric Forms (PUR, City Regions) -- Measurement Criteria, Variables References: Davoudi (2003), Kloosterman and Musterd (2001), Champion (2001), Meijers and Burger (2010)

  5. Polycentric Urban Regions (PURs) • Distinctive Spatial Structure: PUR -- Clustering of Centers -- Size, Spacing, and Size Distribution -- Center-Specialization -- Multi-Centered Metro Areas -- Uniform Homogeneous Regions

  6. Polycentric Urban Regions (PURs) • Study Approaches/ Orientations --Functional/ Relational and Morphological -- Scalar Variations – Meso, Macro, Mega Inter and Intra-Regional Perspectives • Dimensions/ Characteristics -- Physical Forms, Political Entity, Functional Relationships, Historical/ Cultural Identity References: Par (2004), Green (2007), Veneri & Burgalassi (2010), Davoudi (2002)

  7. Polycentric Urban Regions (PURs)(cont.) -- Urban System – Conforms Broadly to the Central Place Model -- Particular Form of Nodal Region -- Bi-Nodal City-Region • General Agreement: Studies are More or Less Context Specific. Reference: Par (2004), Turok & Bailey (2004), Dick & Rimmer (1998), Davoudi (2002)

  8. Important Reminders for Us • Most Research, Conceptualizations, and Debates are in the Context of Developed Countries • Research is Lagging far behind in Context of the DevelopingWorld • Context-Specific Empirical Research is Needed for Academic & Policy Purposes

  9. An Empirical Observation: The Case of NCR in India • The Delhi core (NCT) grew dramatically during the past five decades .

  10. Decadal Growth Rates of Top Metropolitan Agglomerations & the Delhi Core, 1951-2001

  11. A Regional Planning Approach • Concerns over Delhi’s Urban Growth and Spatial Impact Prompted Action • National Commission on Urbanization (NCOU), 1988 • National Capital Region Planning Board (NCRPB), 1985

  12. The Constituent Areas of the NCR • Following an act of Parliament in 1985, a National Capital Region Planning Board (NCRPB) was set up • The NCR was delineated across parts of three adjacent states, Rajasthan, UP, and Haryana • The states voluntarily agreed to surrender their constitutional rights in favor of the Board for planning development of NCR… (NCRPB, 2000, p.xix)

  13. The NCR Policy Zones • Three concentric policy zones were formed with the intent of development of urban centers outside of the NCT-Delhi in a polycentric fashion. -- NCT-Delhi (1483 sq. km) -- Delhi Metropolitan Area (DMA) excluding the NCT- Delhi (1697 sq. km) -- The rest of the NCR (27,063 sq km). -- Also, a ‘Highway Corridor Zone’, and a ‘Central National Capital Region’ (CNCR) based on the former Delhi Metropolitan Area (DMA), were identified.

  14. National Capital Region: Policy Zones

  15. Planning Objectives • Halting the Concentration in Delhi • Redistribution of Population and Activities within the NCR • Avoidance of “Amorphous Blobs on the Landscape” • Postulate: Future Settlements would Emerge in PUR forms References: NCOU Report (1988), NCRPB Report (1985)

  16. Research Focus • Primary Research Focus in Literature: Resources, Management, Directions of Growth, Carrying Capacity, Infra-Structural Stress • Focus of Our Study: To Observe the Settlement Patterns in the Peripheral Region of the NCR from the Perspective of some Morphological Elements of Polycentric Development as a Baseline Prior to the 2011 Census Reports. References: Ahmed & Choi (2011), Bhandari et al (2007), Jain et al (2011), Banerjee (1996), Mookherjee & Geyer (2011)

  17. Research Focus (Contd.) • Study Design: -- The Spatial Entity: The National Capital Region (Core and Periphery) -- The Data Set: Census data—Demographic (Population), Economic (Workers), Spatial (Distance from the Core) -- Urban Settlements: Centers of 20,000 and Over Population Size -- Descriptive Statistics: Core-Periphery Differentials of Population and Occupational Growth Rates, Size and Distance Patterns

  18. Growth Rates Main Workers: Delhi Core and Peripheral Centers, 1991-2001

  19. Growth Rates Other Workers: Delhi Core and Peripheral Centers, 1991-2001

  20. Growth Rates Household Workers: Delhi Core and Peripheral Centers, 1991-2001

  21. Findings • Cities and Towns were concentrated within the 40 km contour line from the NCT-Delhi core • About one-third of Urban Centers (n=51) with growth rates exceeding Delhi core growth were located within the 20 km contour line. • Six of these Centers appear to form a Node around Ghaziabad – a large city of nearly one million population • Distribution of the centers also varied per the state’s developmental status.

  22. Findings (contd.) • Majority of the cities and towns in UP grew at a very moderate pace; some showed negative growth. • A cluster of six centers with Ghaziabad as the node in the east appear to be emerging. • An elongated corridor-like zone of four centers extending northward from Sonipat is noticeable. • These zones may evolve into some forms of polycentric urban regions.

  23. Concluding Remarks • We have to remember that this has been a glimpse backward at the settlement status a decade ago. Only the new census data can offer us current information. • Our observations clearly point to a trend in spatial development in the NCR at the peripheral region of Delhi. • The trend: a predominantly higher growth rates of population and workers at the immediate periphery of Delhi that far surpassed the growth rates of the core. • However, such a trend, while encouraging, is not impressive.

  24. Concluding Remarks (Contd.) • We further detected a possible shaping of future spatial forms in the distribution of urban centers—a ‘node’ in the east and a ‘corridor’ in the north-west. • These are among the rapidly growing centers that may be the ‘incubators’ of regional growth in the future • Above patterns may result partly from NCR policies • It can also be argued that in view of the wide diversity within the NCR and the influence of the Delhi core, such a trend could be inevitable and may have emerged independently. • Answers to such queries must await new data.

  25. Acknowledgements We would like to thank ~ • Stephan Freelan, GIS Specialist, WWU, for drawing some of the illustrations; and, • Jonah White, Graduate Student at WWU, for initial compilation of some Census data.

More Related