scholarly journals Self-organization in urban development: towards a new perspective on spatial planning

2011 ◽  
Vol 4 (2) ◽  
pp. 99-122 ◽  
Author(s):  
Beitske Boonstra ◽  
Luuk Boelens
2016 ◽  
Vol 7 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Leila Marie Farah

How was subsistence livestock linked to architecture and the urban development in the settlement of 17th and 18th century Montreal? This article argues that landscapes and buildings interact with and accommodate the transformation of livestock products and by-products along various stages; and, that these animal parts contribute to defining urban landscapes. The paper presents a novel analytical framework to study foodscapes, and more particularly meatscapes by way of identifying spaces through which animal parts transited, and by spatially mapping them. It does so via a mixed methodological approach, including researching legal documents, travelers’ notes, databases, historical maps and plans dating back to the French period. Examining processes and spaces involving subsistence livestock, their products and by-products as well as individuals related to their transformation provides a new perspective on how ordinary activities shaped the lives and the spaces in a settlement.


Author(s):  
Pier Carlo Palermo ◽  
Davide Ponzini

2011 ◽  
pp. 171-185
Author(s):  
Suharto Teriman ◽  
Tan Yigitcanlar ◽  
Severine Mayere

Sustainable development has long been promoted as the best answer to the world’s environmental problems. This term has generated mass appeal as it implies that both the development of the built environment and its associated resource consumption can be achieved without jeopardising the natural environment. In the urban context, sustainability issues have been reflected in the promotion of sustainable urban development, which emphasises the sensible exploitation of scarce natural resources for urbanisation in a manner that allows future generations to repeat the process. This chapter highlights attempts to promote sustainable urban development through an integration of three important considerations: planning, development and the ecosystem. It highlights the fact that spatial planning processes were traditionally driven by economic and social objectives, and rarely involved promoting the sustainability agenda to achieve a sustainable urban future. As a result, rapid urbanisation has created a variety of pressures on the ecosystem upon which we rely. It is believed that the integration of the urban planning and development processes within the limitations of the ecosystem, monitored by a sustainability assessment mechanism, would offer a better approach to maintaining sustainable resource use without compromising urban development.


2019 ◽  
Vol 135 ◽  
pp. 03050
Author(s):  
Sergei Mezentsev

The purpose of this article is a comprehensive review of spatial and urban planning, and zoning in modern Russia. The starting point of the study is the experience of territorial, urban planning and zoning of the Soviet Union, which has achieved significant success in this area of activity. To achieve this goal, we used the books of modern Russian researchers and the author’s publications of this article, as well as materials posted on the Internet, applied philosophical and scientific approaches and research methods: systemic, dialectic, socio-humanitarian, anthropological, environmental, aesthetic and cybernetic approaches, as well as methods of observation, analysis, synthesis, analogy, comparison, generalization. As a result of the study, many negative phenomena and mistakes made in the territorial planning, zoning and urban development of post-Soviet Russia were revealed: the system was lost, the laws of dialectics are violated, there is no synergy between state structures and civil society, there is an excessive concentration of the population in Moscow and the Moscow region, it isn’t possible to provide comfortable and safe living conditions for each person and, the most importantly, environmental problems in cities and neighboring territories become more acute.


2012 ◽  
Vol 591-593 ◽  
pp. 2628-2631
Author(s):  
Hai Wang Cao ◽  
Chao Gai Xue

In order to avoid enterprise information system (EIS) risk, the self-organization mechanism of EIS based on complex adaptive system (CAS) is studied. Firstly, self-organization properties of EIS are analyzed, which include open system, nonlinear characteristics, far from equilibrium and fluctuations. Secondly, the complex properties and complex adaptive properties of EIS self-organization are studied. The complex properties include multi-agent, active adaptation of agents, multi-level nature, technology complexity, organizational complexity, process complexity and environment complexity. The complex adaptive properties include aggregation mechanism, identification mechanism, non-linear characteristics flow characteristics, diversity characteristics, internal model mechanism and block characteristics. Finally, architecture model of EIS self-organization is proposed as well as its macro and micro models, which provides a new perspective for EIS and helps understand the rules of EIS implementation.


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