Developmentality : Biopower, Planning, and the Living City
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Cities As Complex Systems: Scaling, Interactions, Networks, Dynamics and Urban Morphologies
UCL CENTRE FOR ADVANCED SPATIAL ANALYSIS WORKING PAPERS SERIES Paper 131 - Feb 08 Cities as Complex Systems: Scaling, Interactions, Networks, Dynamics and Urban Morphologies ISSN 1467-1298 Centre for Advanced Spatial Analysis University College London 1 - 19 Torrington Place Gower St London WC1E 7HB Tel: +44 (0)20 7679 1782 [email protected] www.casa.ucl.ac.uk Cities as Complex Systems† Scaling, Interactions, Networks, Dynamics and Urban Morphologies Michael Batty Centre for Advanced Spatial Analysis, University College London, 1-19 Torrington Place, London WC1E 6BT, UK Email: [email protected], Web: www.casa.ucl.ac.uk Abstract Cities have been treated as systems for fifty year but only in the last two decades has the focus changed from aggregate equilibrium systems to more evolving systems whose structure merges from the bottom up. We first outline the rudiments of the traditional approach focusing on equilibrium and then discuss how the paradigm has changed to one which treats cities as emergent phenomena generated through a combination of hierarchical levels of decision, driven in decentralized fashion. This is consistent with the complexity sciences which dominate the simulation of urban form and function. We begin however with a review of equilibrium models, particularly those based on spatial interaction, and we then explore how simple dynamic frameworks can be fashioned to generate more realistic models. In exploring dynamics, nonlinear systems which admit chaos and bifurcation have relevance but recently more pragmatic schemes of structuring urban models based on cellular automata and agent-based modeling principles have come to the fore. Most urban models deal with the city in terms of the location of its economic and demographic activities but there is also a move to link such models to urban morphologies which are clearly fractal in structure. -
Trends of Urbanization and Suburbanization in Southeast Asia 1
1 Trends of Urbanization and Suburbanization in Southeast Asia 1 TRENDS OF URBANIZATION AND SUBURBANIZATION IN SOUTHEAST ASIA Edited by Tôn Nữ Quỳnh Trân Fanny Quertamp Claude de Miras Nguyễn Quang Vinh Lê Văn Năm Trương Hoàng Trương Ho Chi Minh City General Publishing House 2 Trends of Urbanization and Suburbanization in Southeast Asia 3 Trends of Urbanization and Suburbanization in Southeast Asia TRENDS OF URBANIZATION AND SUBURBANIZATION IN SOUTHEAST ASIA 4 Trends of Urbanization and Suburbanization in Southeast Asia Cooperation Centre for Urban Development, Hanoi (Institut des Métiers de la Ville (IMV)) was created in 2001 by the People’s Committee of Hanoi and the Ile- de-France Region (France) within their general cooperation agreement. It has for first vocation to improve the competences of the municipal staff in the field of urban planning and management of urban services. The concerned technical departments are the department or urban planning and architecture, the department of transport and civil engineering, the authority for public transports planning, the construction department… IMV organizes seminars to support decision-makers and technicians, finances studies, implements consultancies, contributes to knowledge dissemination by the translation of scientific and technical books, and maintain a library on urban planning. Ho Chi Minh City Urban Development Management Support Centre (Centre de Prospective et d’Etudes Urbaines (PADDI)) was created in 2004 in cooperation between the People’s Committee of Ho Chi Minh City and the Rhône-Alpes Region (France). Its office is located inside the Ho Chi Minh City Town Planning Institute. Competences of PADDI are training, consultancies and research. -
Two Diplomas Awarded to George Joseph Bell Now in the Possession of the Royal Medical Society
Res Medica, Volume 268, Issue 2, 2005 Page 1 of 6 Two Diplomas Awarded to George Joseph Bell now in the Possession of the Royal Medical Society Matthew H. Kaufman Professor of Anatomy, Honorary Librarian of the Royal Medical Society Abstract The two earliest diplomas in the possession of the Royal Medical Society were both awarded to George Joseph Bell, BA Oxford. One of these diplomas was his Extraordinary Membership Diploma that was awarded to him on 5 April 1839. Very few of these Diplomas appear to have survived, and the critical introductory part of his Diploma is inscribed as follows: Ingenuus ornatissimusque Vir Georgius Jos. Bell dum socius nobis per tres annos interfuit, plurima eademque pulcherrima, hand minus ingenii f elicis, quam diligentiae insignis, animique ad optimum quodque parati, exempla in medium protulit. In quorum fidem has literas, meritis tantum concessus, manibus nostris sigilloque munitas, discedenti lubentissime donatus.2 Edinburgi 5 Aprilis 1839.3 Copyright Royal Medical Society. All rights reserved. The copyright is retained by the author and the Royal Medical Society, except where explicitly otherwise stated. Scans have been produced by the Digital Imaging Unit at Edinburgh University Library. Res Medica is supported by the University of Edinburgh’s Journal Hosting Service url: http://journals.ed.ac.uk ISSN: 2051-7580 (Online) ISSN: ISSN 0482-3206 (Print) Res Medica is published by the Royal Medical Society, 5/5 Bristo Square, Edinburgh, EH8 9AL Res Medica, Volume 268, Issue 2, 2005: 39-43 doi:10.2218/resmedica.v268i2.1026 Kaufman, M. H, Two Diplomas Awarded to George Joseph Bell now in the Possession of the Royal Medical Society, Res Medica, Volume 268, Issue 2 2005, pp.39-43 doi:10.2218/resmedica.v268i2.1026 Two Diplomas Awarded to George Joseph Bell now in the Possession of the Royal Medical Society MATTHEW H. -
Professor Michael Batty CBE FBA FRS Curriculum Vitae 1
Professor Michael Batty CBE FBA FRS Curriculum Vitae _______________________________________________________________________________ Brief Biography and Summary Michael Batty is, by training, an architect-planner and geographer. He is Bartlett Professor of Planning at University College London where he is Chairman of the Centre for Advanced Spatial Analysis (CASA). His career began in the University of Manchester in 1966 where he was appointed an Assistant Lecturer in Town and Country Planning. He then spent 10 years at the University of Reading as Research Assistant, Lecturer and Reader in Geography, before moving to the University of Wales Institute of Science and Technology (now the University of Cardiff), in 1979, where he was Professor of Town Planning. During this time, he acted as Head of Department, and Dean of the Faculty of Environmental Design. In 1990, he moved to direct the NSF National Centre for Geographic Information and Analysis (NCGIA) at the State University of New York at Buffalo (SUNY-Buffalo) where he was a Professor of Geography. He has held several visiting appointments in computing, engineering, planning, and geography at the Universities of Illinois, Melbourne, Hong Kong, Bristol, and Michigan, and is currently a Visiting Distinguished Professor at Arizona State University, and an Honorary Professor at Cardiff University. He has been at UCL since 1995 where he set up CASA as an interdisciplinary centre focussed on the development of mathematical models and digital technologies in geographical information science, urban and regional modelling, and the science of cities. CASA has grown to around 50 research and administrative staff in the last 15 years and now has an annual income of around £3 million mainly funded from research grants coming primarily from EPSRC, ESRC, JISC, the EU 7th Framework, and the ERC. -
Monterey County Historical Society - Hornbeck Collection - Book Inventory
California State University, Monterey Bay Digital Commons @ CSUMB Related Research and Documents Research and Links 8-13-2019 2019 - Monterey County Historical Society - Hornbeck Collection - Book Inventory Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.csumb.edu/hornbeck_research_rel Part of the Business Commons, Education Commons, Law Commons, Life Sciences Commons, Physical Sciences and Mathematics Commons, and the Social and Behavioral Sciences Commons Recommended Citation "2019 - Monterey County Historical Society - Hornbeck Collection - Book Inventory" (2019). Related Research and Documents. 17. https://digitalcommons.csumb.edu/hornbeck_research_rel/17 This Report is brought to you for free and open access by the Research and Links at Digital Commons @ CSUMB. It has been accepted for inclusion in Related Research and Documents by an authorized administrator of Digital Commons @ CSUMB. For more information, please contact [email protected]. HORNBECK BOOK INVENTORY WorldCat: OCLC New to Title Author/Editor Copyright Box # ISBN Publisher No. CSUMB INDEX - Personal, Business, and Official Correspondence of Thomas Oliver Larkin, Merchant The Larkin Papers Larkin, Thomas Oliver 1968 1 836420115 Y and US Consul in Ca; Edited by George P. Hammond, Director of the Bancroft Library The Larkin Papers Larkin, Thomas Oliver Volume I - 1822-1842 1941 1 253470720 Y The Larkin Papers Larkin, Thomas Oliver Volume II - 1843-1844 1952 1 253470026 Y The Larkin Papers Larkin, Thomas Oliver Volume III - 1845 1952 1 253470449 Y The -
Graphics, Visualization and the Social Sciences 02/24/99 Graphics, Visualization and the Social Sciences
Graphics, Visualization and the Social Sciences 02/24/99 Graphics, Visualization and the Social Sciences Workshop 8 & 9 May 1997 Burleigh Court Loughborough University Contents Section 1 Executive Summary and Recommendations Issues Discussed Recommendations Background to the Workshop — Anne Mumford Graphics Visualization and the Social Sciences —David Unwin Introduction to the Themes Maps Presentations Discussions Conclusions and Recommendations Visualization of Statistics Presentations Discussions Conclusions and Recommendations Models and Simulations Presentations Discussions Conclusions and Recommendations Technology Presentations c:\agocg\cd\WSHOP\33\REPORT33.HTM Page 1 of 31 Graphics, Visualization and the Social Sciences 02/24/99 Discussions Conclusions and Recommendations General Discussions Agenda for the Workshop Participants References, Contacts and Acronyms Section 2 (only available in paper version) Visualizing Spatial Development Through Agent-Based Simulations — M. Batty¸1 Developing a Visualization Gateway to Census Data at MIDAS — J. Carter¸5 Using (Geo)Graphical Environment on the World Wide Web to Improve Public¸11 Participation in Social Science Research — S. Carver Design Visualisation and Communication: The Application of Computer Aided¸15 Design and Animation in Landscape Design Teaching — A. Clayden Visualising Urban Environments for Planning and Design¸19 M. Dodge, A. Smith and S. Doyle Visualisation Software, Complex Datasets and the Social Sciences¸25 B. Francis and J. Pritchard coMentor. A Collaborative WWW-Based Virtual Environment to Support¸31 Social Science Students — G. Gibbs, C. Skinner and A. Teal Seeing Structures and Colouring Up Theories — B. Hillier¸39 Hypermedia Representations of an Ethnography Opening Pandora's Box?¸59 B. Holbrook, B. Dicks, A. Coffey and P. Atkinson Supporting Flexible Manipulation and Presentation of Statistics — R. -
Lessons from the Crimean War: How Hospitals Were Transformed by Florence Nightingale and Others
HISTORY Infect Dis Clin Microbiol 2019; 1(2): 110-118 Lessons from the Crimean War: How Hospitals were Transformed by Florence Nightingale and Others Uğurgül Tunç Department of Archaeology and History of Art, Koç University Graduate School of Social Sciences and Humanities, İstanbul, Turkey ABSTRACT The spread of infectious diseases claimed more lives than battle wounds during the Crimean War (1853-1856). Istanbul, then the Ottoman capital, was transformed into a medical hub where new ideas were tested and exchanged among physicians, surgeons and nurses from all over Europe to control the spread of disease. Although the most well-known figure of this international effort was Florence Nightingale, the medical community serving in Istanbul at the time had many other heroes and heroines. While Nightingale’s work played an important role in shaping healthcare facilities in the second half of the 19th century, there were other factors at play that led to this transformation. Notably, the Crimean War was the first major armed conflict that was directly reported from the front by newspaper reporters as it was happening; a possible catalyst for the significant improvements in hospital conditions that Post-Crimean War Europe witnessed. Most of these improvements were measures that had already been proposed prior to the Crimean War. Pavilion style typology in hospital architecture was one such measure dating back to the first quarter of the 18th century. This article attempts to question the changing attitudes in Europe towards healthcare facilities immediately after the Crimean War and questions their links to political aspirations of the time. he Crimean War (1853-1856) transformed Istanbul, then the Ottoman capital, Corresponding Author: into a medical hub where new ideas were tested and exchanged among doctors Uğurgül Tunç and nurses from all over Europe to control the spread of infectious diseases that T E-mail: claimed more lives than battle wounds. -
Urban Morphodynamics Justin Delloye
Urban Morphodynamics Justin Delloye To cite this version: Justin Delloye. Urban Morphodynamics: Reconciling Location Theory and Complex Systems. Geog- raphy. Université catholique de Louvain (Louvain-la-Neuve, Belgique), 2018. English. tel-01847861 HAL Id: tel-01847861 https://tel.archives-ouvertes.fr/tel-01847861 Submitted on 24 Jul 2018 HAL is a multi-disciplinary open access L’archive ouverte pluridisciplinaire HAL, est archive for the deposit and dissemination of sci- destinée au dépôt et à la diffusion de documents entific research documents, whether they are pub- scientifiques de niveau recherche, publiés ou non, lished or not. The documents may come from émanant des établissements d’enseignement et de teaching and research institutions in France or recherche français ou étrangers, des laboratoires abroad, or from public or private research centers. publics ou privés. Université catholique de Louvain Faculté des Sciences, École de Géographie Center for Operations Research and Econometrics Urban Morphodynamics Reconciling Location Theory and Complex Systems Doctoral Dissertation presented by Justin Delloye in fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor in Sciences Thesis committee: Prof. Dominique Peeters (Supervisor) Université catholique de Louvain Prof. Isabelle Thomas (Supervisor) Université catholique de Louvain Prof. Marie-Laurence De Keersmaecker (Chair) Université catholique de Louvain Prof. Joe Tharakan (Secretary) Université de Liège Prof. Geoffrey Caruso Université du Luxembourg Prof. Rosella Nicolini Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona Dr. Elsa Arcaute University College of London Louvain-la-Neuve, Belgium April 2018 Acknowledgements This thesis is the culmination of forty months of intensive research. Forty months of learning, meeting and questioning. This work could not have been carried out without the material support of the Belgian Fund for Scientific Research, which I thank for having provided me with a FRESH grant since October 2014. -
Cambridge University Press 978-1-108-41966-6 — the Victorian Palace of Science Edward J
Cambridge University Press 978-1-108-41966-6 — The Victorian Palace of Science Edward J. Gillin Index More Information Index A Geological Manual,94 Albemarle Street, 68 A Preliminary Discourse on the Study of Albert, Prince, 160, 195 Natural philosophy,4 anti slavery, 158 A rudimentary treatise on clock and at the British Association, 68 watchmaking, 245 Michael Faraday, 184 Aberdeen, University of, 29 Alison, Archibald, 50–52 abolition of slavery, 3, 91, 158 on architecture, 51, 52 Acland, Thomas, 198 on Parliament, 51 acoustics, 30, 31, 56, 58, 59, 84, 140, 143 on utility, 52 Adams, Robert, 116, 117 political views, 51 Admiralty, 224 All Saint’s Church, Babbacombe, 120 Airy, George Biddell, 203, 216, 218, 220, All Souls College, Oxford, 95 232, 233, 238, 244, 252, 253, 256, An Introduction to the Study of Chemical 262, 263, 267, 268, 271 Philosophy,99 accuracy, 214, 224, 225, 237 Anderson, John Wilson, 131, 132 as Astronomer Royal, 221–23 Anglican, 6, 244 at Cambridge, 220 architecture, 109 at Greenwich, 216, 217, 221–23, 224, Broad Church, 6 225, 231 Cornwall, 188 authority over Edward John Dent, 250–51 geology, 107 career, 220 governance, 51 compass deviation, 221 High Church, 47, 106 dispute with Benjamin Vulliamy, 234–38 John Frederic Daniell, 99 Edmund Beckett Denison, 216 science, 5 Edward John Dent, 219, 225–26, 237 theology, 4 galvanic regulation, 217 universities, 125 galvanic time system, 227, 228–32, Anning, Mary, 91 238–44, 252, 253, 258 Ansted, David, 266 Greenwich time, 217 Anston stone, 102, 115, 117, 118, 265, Greenwich -
Portico 5 Features 16 College Update 20 Faculty Update 29 Honor Roll 40 Class Notes 47 in Memoriam 48 Student Update 53 Calendar
university of michigan taubman college of architecture and urban planning fall 2010 portico 5 features 16 college update 20 faculty update 29 honor roll 40 class notes 47 in memoriam 48 student update 53 calendar Cover image: Exterior rear, house of Mr. and Mrs. Robert C. Metcalf, 1952, Ann Arbor, MI. Photograph courtesy of the Bentley Historical Library, University of Michigan. ii Figure 1. Macallen Project Before becoming dean at Taubman College of Architecture Constructing Green: and Urban Planning, I was a professor of architecture at Harvard University were I taught design studios; lecture and seminar courses on topics, including digital technology Sustainability and the and the history of design; and an introductory course on the environmental impact of material selection and application. Places We Inhabit I am also a practicing architect and as such, I have dealt with the struggle to do the right thing on real projects, in real time, A paper presented by Dean Monica Ponce de Leon at UM with real budgets and real constraints. As someone who has Ross School of Business for the Erb Institute for Global and a foot firmly planted in academia, and a foot firmly planted Sustainable Enterprise’s conference in practice, through this essay, I wanted to address the design 1 10000 be dependent on access to innovation and information so that 9000 designers, owners and users can make informed choices. 8000 Today many designers see third-party certification systems 7000 as the only viable solution to the environmental impact of 6000 buildings. Third-party certification systems and organizations 5000 have become increasingly streamlined, recognized and 4000 respected. -
Why Centralization Caused the Downfall of the Early Public Health Movement in Victorian Britain
Central Sanitation: Why Centralization Caused the Downfall of the Early Public Health Movement in Victorian Britain. Joseph Naaykens V00818191 April 1, 2020 HSTR 499 Professor Simon Devereaux Word count: 10,655 Public health became a pressing issue in Britain during the nineteenth century. With the exception of the bubonic plague, epidemics were an uncommon issue for most of Britain’s population prior to this period because a large majority of the population was dispersed across wide, rural areas in small communities. Although diseases could circulate easily among the minority who lived in the densely populated setting of towns, the space between the rural majorities made the spread of disease a far less significant issue for them.1 This changed with the new economic opportunities brought about by the Industrial Revolution. An unprecedented migration from rural areas to towns occurred as people flocked to job opportunities in factories.2 The proportion of Britain’s population living in large towns increased from one-fifth in 1801 to over half by 1851.3 As a result, far more of Britain’s population was exposed to the close- quarters environment of towns, a dangerous environment in which rapid population expansion and development promoted the spread of disease. Development of key infrastructure such as housing, drainage, and amenities was haphazard and unplanned due to the unprecedented rapidity of the towns’ expansion. Overcrowding, poorly constructed housing, a lack of fresh air, as well as ever-present dirt and human waste was the result. The water supplies of towns were just as unclean. Whether taken from local sources such as wells, or acquired from the various competing water companies, the water used by the towns of early nineteenth-century Britain was consistently polluted.4 These conditions caused a severe deterioration of public health. -
Chapter One James Mylne: Early Life and Education
This thesis has been submitted in fulfilment of the requirements for a postgraduate degree (e.g. PhD, MPhil, DClinPsychol) at the University of Edinburgh. Please note the following terms and conditions of use: • This work is protected by copyright and other intellectual property rights, which are retained by the thesis author, unless otherwise stated. • A copy can be downloaded for personal non-commercial research or study, without prior permission or charge. • This thesis cannot be reproduced or quoted extensively from without first obtaining permission in writing from the author. • The content must not be changed in any way or sold commercially in any format or medium without the formal permission of the author. • When referring to this work, full bibliographic details including the author, title, awarding institution and date of the thesis must be given. 2013 THESIS Rational Piety and Social Reform in Glasgow: The Life, Philosophy and Political Economy of James Mylne (1757-1839) By Stephen Cowley The University of Edinburgh For the degree of PhD © Stephen Cowley 2013 SOME QUOTES FROM JAMES MYLNE’S LECTURES “I have no objection to common sense, as long as it does not hinder investigation.” Lectures on Intellectual Philosophy “Hope never deserts the children of sorrow.” Lectures on the Existence and Attributes of God “The great mine from which all wealth is drawn is the intellect of man.” Lectures on Political Economy Page 2 Page 3 INFORMATION FOR EXAMINERS In addition to the thesis itself, I submit (a) transcriptions of four sets of student notes of Mylne’s lectures on moral philosophy; (b) one set of notes on political economy; and (c) collation of lectures on intellectual philosophy (i.e.