The steep part of Davis's S-curve represents this process.
Industrialization
This term highlights the difference in the design and experience of spaces for men and women.
Gendered spaces
Jane Jacobs says these things associated with people ultimately make streets safer.
Eyes and ears
New Urbanism derives part of its influence from this 1929 design conception.
Perry's neighborhood unit
Though not exact or perfect, this term has come to large replace what used to be classified as "Third World."
Global South
The earliest (real) cities started in these two regions of civilization.
Mesopotamia and Egypt
This term is used to describe areas of concentrated commercial activities outside a downtown CBD.
Edge cities
This person constructed an urban personality profile based on the size, density, and heterogeneity of cities.
Louis Wirth
One example of utopian planning that incorporates plazas and monuments is the ________ movement.
City beautiful
Ancient Egyptian cities have fewer walls mainly because of less need for this.
Defense.
The first cities developed from surplus of this product.
Food
This French person is associated with production of space and right to the city.
Henri Lefebvre
Kenneth Jackson's drive-in culture of America refers to this urban planning challenge.
Car dependency.
Manuel Castells said that the most important project for urban designers is creating these things.
Public spaces
Spatial patterns of colonial cities vary mainly based on relationship between ____ and ____.
settlers and natives
The world became majority urban in this decade.
2000s
Critically, ghettos are largely the result of spatial practices described using this adjective.
Exclusionary
Criticisms against the broken window theory centers around the concern that it may lead to this troubling practice.
Criminalization of disadvantage
Peter Hall's "Marxist ascendancy" refers to renewed attention to this, in contrast/response to earlier urban conceptions that neglect it.
Power and politics
The idea of "ordinary cities" is a challenge to a universalist model based on a small subset of cities referred to as this term (coined by Saskia Sassen).
World or global cities
According to V. Gordon Childe, what makes a city are large/dense populations, specialty occupations, governments/monuments, and these.
Systems of writing
Cities are sometimes referred to as engines of innovation because they facilitate the formation of this structure.
Agglomeration economies
The one commonality in urban experiences is the relative frequent encounter of this.
Strangers
This is at the heart of placemaking, and what separates places from mere spaces.
Meaning
World systems theory has its roots in a branch that focuses on the unequal relationship between core and periphery, also known as this.
dependency