Urbanization in the Global South

W. Smit
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

The term “global South” (or just “South” or “south”) refers to the diverse range of countries in Asia, Africa, and Latin America that have a colonial past and are usually characterized by high levels of poverty and informality. The term global South has widely replaced other, similar, terms such as the Third World, developing countries, and low- and middle-income countries. Urbanization, in its narrow sense, refers to an increase in the proportion of the population living in urban areas; in its wider sense it refers to all the social, economic, biophysical, and institutional changes that result from and accompany urban growth, many of which have a profound impact on human health and well-being. The global South is the most rapidly urbanizing part of the world. Since about 2015, more than 75% of the world’s urban population lives in the global South. It is projected that by 2025, the urban population of the global South will be 3.75 billion (54.3% of the total population of the global South). Most of this urbanization is as a result of urban areas having higher natural population growth rates than rural areas, but migration to urban areas also plays a significant role. Although urbanization processes vary considerably across different countries in the global South (e.g., between different regions and between middle-income and low-income countries), there are a number of broad common trends: a rapid increase in the number of megacities (urban agglomerations with a population of more than 10 million), ongoing strong urban–rural linkages and increased blurring of “urban” and “rural,” increased urban sprawl and fragmentation, and growing intra-urban inequalities. There has been much debate about the nature of cities and urban life in the global South, giving rise to a body of literature on “southern urbanism,” characterized by case studies of everyday life. Urbanization processes in the global South have contributed to the growth and complexity of the burden of disease. Infectious diseases have continued at high levels due to poor environmental conditions in many parts of cities, particularly in informal settlements and other types of slums. Noncommunicable diseases are also growing rapidly in the global South, linked to changes in living conditions and lifestyle associated with urbanization. It is anticipated that the burden of disease in cities of the global South will continue to increase as urbanization continues, as a result of increased traffic injuries and respiratory disease resulting from increased numbers of motor vehicles; growing levels of violence due to growing levels of poverty and inequality in many cities; growing obesity as a result of changed lifestyles associated with urbanization; growing numbers of unsafe settlements in hazardous areas; and a high risk of infectious diseases. Climate change is likely to exacerbate these risks.
全球南方的城市化
“全球南方”(或简称“南方”或“南方”)一词指的是亚洲、非洲和拉丁美洲的各种各样的国家,这些国家过去都有殖民历史,通常以高度贫困和不文明为特征。“全球南方”一词已经广泛取代了其他类似的术语,如“第三世界”、“发展中国家”和“中低收入国家”。从狭义上讲,城市化是指居住在城市地区的人口比例的增加;从更广泛的意义上讲,它指的是城市增长所导致和伴随而来的所有社会、经济、生物物理和体制变化,其中许多变化对人类健康和福祉产生深远影响。全球南方是世界上城市化速度最快的地区。大约自2015年以来,世界上75%以上的城市人口生活在全球南方。预计到2025年,全球南方国家的城市人口将达到37.5亿(占全球南方国家总人口的54.3%)。这种城市化主要是由于城市地区的人口自然增长率高于农村地区,但向城市地区的移民也起着重要作用。尽管全球南方不同国家的城市化进程差异很大(例如,不同地区之间以及中等收入和低收入国家之间),但有一些广泛的共同趋势:特大城市(人口超过1000万的城市群)数量迅速增加,城乡联系持续紧密,“城市”和“农村”日益模糊,城市扩张和碎片化加剧,城市内部不平等日益加剧。关于南方国家的城市和城市生活的本质一直有很多争论,产生了一系列关于“南方城市主义”的文献,以日常生活的案例研究为特征。全球南方的城市化进程加剧了疾病负担的增长和复杂性。由于城市许多地区,特别是非正规住区和其他类型的贫民窟的环境条件恶劣,传染病继续处于高水平。非传染性疾病在全球南方也在迅速增长,这与城市化带来的生活条件和生活方式变化有关。预计随着城市化进程的继续,全球南方城市的疾病负担将继续增加,原因是机动车数量增加造成的交通伤害和呼吸系统疾病增加;许多城市的贫困和不平等加剧导致暴力加剧;与城市化相关的生活方式改变导致的日益严重的肥胖;危险地区越来越多的不安全定居点;而且感染传染病的风险很高。气候变化可能会加剧这些风险。
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