TY - BOOK ID - 4869448 TI - Unique Urbanity? : Rethinking Third Tier Cities, Degeneration, Regeneration and Mobility PY - 2015 SN - 9789812872692 981287268X 9789812872685 9812872698 PB - Singapore : Springer Singapore : Imprint: Springer, DB - UniCat KW - Geography. KW - Urban Geography / Urbanism (inc. megacities, cities, towns). KW - Landscape/Regional and Urban Planning. KW - Human Geography. KW - Regional planning. KW - Géographie KW - Aménagement du territoire KW - Developing countries KW - Economic conditions. KW - Urban planning. KW - Urban geography. KW - Human geography. KW - Anthropo-geography KW - Anthropogeography KW - Geographical distribution of humans KW - Social geography KW - Anthropology KW - Geography KW - Human ecology KW - Regional development KW - Regional planning KW - State planning KW - Human settlements KW - Land use KW - Planning KW - City planning KW - Landscape protection KW - Government policy KW - Cities and towns KW - Civic planning KW - Land use, Urban KW - Model cities KW - Redevelopment, Urban KW - Slum clearance KW - Town planning KW - Urban design KW - Urban development KW - Urban planning KW - Art, Municipal KW - Civic improvement KW - Urban policy KW - Urban renewal KW - Management UR - https://www.unicat.be/uniCat?func=search&query=sysid:4869448 AB - This book investigates small cities - cities and towns that are not well known or internationally branded, but are facing structural economic and social issues after the Global Financial Crisis. They need to invent, develop and manage new reasons for their existence. The strengths and opportunities are often underplayed when compared to larger cities. These small cities do not have the profile of New York, London, Tokyo or Cairo, or second-tier cities like San Francisco, Manchester, Osaka or Alexandria. This book traces the current state of the creative industries literature after the GFC, but with a specific focus. The specific – and worsening – conditions in third-tier cities are logged. The social and economic challenges within these regions are great, particularly with regard to health and health services, education, employment, social mobility and physical activity. This is not a study that merely diagnoses problems but raises strategies for third-tier cities to create both a profile and growth. The current research field is synthesized to reveal how cities are defined, constituted, developed and, in many cases, suffering decline. There is an imperative to build relationships with other urban environments. The book enters these under-discussed locations and reveal the scarred layering of injustice, signified by depopulation, dis-investment, economic decline and a reduction in public services for health, transportation and education, while also developing specific and innovative models for improvement. The vista summoned in Unique Urbanity is international, with strong attention to trans-local strategies that offer wide relevance, currency and opportunities for policy makers. While third-tier cities are often hidden, marginalized, invisible or demeaned, Unique Urbanity shows that innovation, imagination and creativity can emerge in small places. ER -