Welcome to the Urbanization and Development: Practice, Theory, and Policy course! The 21st century is an urban century. The UN estimates show that more than half the global population lives in cities. More than two-thirds of the global population is expected to be in cities by 2050 and this will be concentrated in cities in Asia, Africa, and Latin America. The UN projects that India and China, the two populous countries, will have nearly 700 million inhabitants in their cities. Yet, these Indian and Chinese cities have some high levels of inequality and competing interests over physical, economic, and political spaces. This course examines what makes cities contradictory spaces of work, residence, and play that enable the release of creative energies, aspirations, and economies yet simultaneously restrict, control, and confine.
Since the mid-nineties, the Indian and the Chinese State have attempted to transform the city spaces to attract globally connected corporate economies. While government agencies attempt to shape city spaces through policies, mega urban development projects, new laws, and institutions, not all these efforts follow a designed trajectory. The attempt to transform urban spaces is often incomplete, and the resistance or subversion from court cases, as well as the contradictions within the government, shape the project’s unpredictable trajectory. Perhaps, a challenge confronting every policymaker is the dynamic nature of city territories and the difficulty in predicting or controlling the actions of diverse actors.
The course will specifically examine the practices by which urban spaces are constituted and used, the role of actors and institutions, law in letter and practice, and the effects on social justice and inequality. Further, you will explore the fit between city practices and policies and theories undergirding policies. You will also learn about the actual practices on the ground and mobilizing case studies of existing practices to critically engage with diverse theoretical perspectives—ranging from the Chicago school of urbanism and Marxism to the new urban economics and the emerging southern theories on cities.
The module will introduce you to different definitions of urbanization, the significant role of urban areas in driving economic development, and the shifting approaches to urbanization in the policy. You will also explore the geographical variations in the definition of urbanization and spatial patterns of urban growth. The module introduces you to the dynamics of city spaces, namely their cultural, social, and economic spaces. Further, it explores the concept of sustainable cities.
What's included
11 videos2 readings4 assignments
Show info about module content
11 videos•Total 136 minutes
Course Introduction•6 minutes
Cities as Social Spaces•12 minutes
Cities as Cultural Spaces •14 minutes
City in Policy •15 minutes
Agglomeration and Scale Economies•13 minutes
Localization Economies​•13 minutes
Urbanization Economies •15 minutes
Urban Growth and Externalities•13 minutes
Urbanization: Global Patterns and Implications•11 minutes
Essential Readings: City Spaces: Nature and Dynamics•10 minutes
4 assignments•Total 90 minutes
City Spaces•9 minutes
City Economies•12 minutes
Sustainable Cities•9 minutes
Graded Quiz: City Spaces: Nature and Dynamics •60 minutes
Modern City Theories
Module 2•4 hours to complete
Module details
This module focuses on modern city theories. The sustainability of our economies depends on ensuring the prosperity of all in a city, community, and nation. In this module, you will explore modernization theories on cities through a focus on three strands of theories, namely, the British Utopias, Chicago School of Urban Ecology Theories, and Marxist theories on cities.
What's included
9 videos2 readings4 assignments
Show info about module content
9 videos•Total 89 minutes
Modernist City and Planning Utopia: The Garden City•10 minutes
Retrofitting the City: Patrick Geddes •10 minutes
Cities for People•11 minutes
Theories on Modernist City: Chicago School •10 minutes
Urbanism and Culture of Poverty•9 minutes
Ernest Burgess’s City•9 minutes
City as a Space of Production•9 minutes
Harvey’s Capitalist City•10 minutes
City as Consumption Spaces•10 minutes
2 readings•Total 60 minutes
Essential Reading: Modern City Theories•30 minutes
Recommended Reading: Modern City Theories•30 minutes
4 assignments•Total 87 minutes
Modernist City and Planning •9 minutes
Modernist City Theories- Part 1•9 minutes
Modernist City Theories- Part 2•9 minutes
Graded Quiz: Modernist City Theories•60 minutes
Urbanization and Social and Ecological Urbanization
Module 3•4 hours to complete
Module details
This module introduces you to social and ecological urbanization. In this module, you will explore how the rise of identity and middle-class politics since the mid-seventies, together with the environmental and ecological crisis confronting humankind, generated new questions about urban social relations and shifted the theorization of nature and the city.
What's included
6 videos3 readings3 assignments
Show info about module content
6 videos•Total 58 minutes
Social Identity in City •8 minutes
Social Identity and Urban Space •10 minutes
City Cultures and Urban Space •9 minutes
Taming Nature •10 minutes
Urbanizing the Frontier•10 minutes
Climate Change and Cities •11 minutes
3 readings•Total 90 minutes
Essential Reading: Living with Difference and Diversity in Cities•30 minutes
Recommended Reading: Living with Difference and Diversity in Cities•30 minutes
Essential Reading–Nature and City •30 minutes
3 assignments•Total 78 minutes
Living with Difference and Diversity in Cities•9 minutes
Nature and City•9 minutes
Graded Quiz: Urbanization and Social and Ecological Urbanization•60 minutes
Informality and Sustainable Development
Module 4•4 hours to complete
Module details
Urban theories assume that all cities follow a similar development trajectory, and Western cities are considered archetypes. In this module, you will explore critically urban forms in post-colonial cities and in this light, their dual structure. Firstly, you will be introduced to the binary lens, namely, formal vs. informal and legal vs. illegal, in vogue to understand the cities of the Global South. Further, you will explore different conceptions of informal—as a sector, as a relationship, and as a process. You will understand the relationship between the formal and the informal. Lastly, you will explore how this duality (formal and informal) manifests in land, housing, and infrastructure.
What's included
9 videos1 reading4 assignments
Show info about module content
9 videos•Total 96 minutes
Informal Economy•12 minutes
Everyday Work in the Urban Informal Economy (UIE)•10 minutes
Street Work•10 minutes
Land Systems: Formal and Informal City •12 minutes
Informal Housing•12 minutes
Rental Housing•9 minutes
Urban Informal Finance •9 minutes
E-Waste Workers •11 minutes
Reconsidering Informality or Illegality Concepts •12 minutes
1 reading•Total 30 minutes
Essential Readings: Informality and Sustainable Development•30 minutes
4 assignments•Total 87 minutes
Dual/Divided Cities: Introduction to Urban Informality•9 minutes
Land, Infrastructure, and Housing•9 minutes
Urban Informal Finance and Work•9 minutes
Graded Quiz: Informality and Sustainable Development•60 minutes
Urban Policy
Module 5•3 hours to complete
Module details
This module introduces you to the history of urban governments in the European Context and its introduction in the Asian, Latin American, and African contexts until the decade of nineties, prior to the globalization era. You will explore the institutional arrangement and the differences between cities in the role and powers of urban local government with respect to the master plan. You will also learn about the State–society’s relationship and social housing.
What's included
9 videos1 reading4 assignments
Show info about module content
9 videos•Total 86 minutes
Master Plan•9 minutes
Sewer Master Plan in Colonial Context •9 minutes
Projecting the City •11 minutes
Plans and Planning: China •9 minutes
Planning Legacy: Cape Town, South Africa •10 minutes
Plans and Planning: Case Study of Chennai, India•9 minutes
Legal Tenure and Secure Housing Access•12 minutes
1 reading•Total 30 minutes
Essential Readings: Urban Policy•30 minutes
4 assignments•Total 87 minutes
Master Plan: History and Post-Colonial Cities•9 minutes
Making the Plan: India, China, and South Africa•9 minutes
State-Society Relationship•9 minutes
Graded Quiz: Urban Policy•60 minutes
Globalizing Cities
Module 6•3 hours to complete
Module details
In this module, you will explore the impact of globalization on city spaces. You will learn the theories on globalization, particularly those of World Cities, Global Cities, Transnational Urbanism, and Worlding Cities. You will explore how globalization impacted cities using the lens of accumulation by dispossession, speculative urbanism, and gentrification.
Impacts of Policies on Worlding Cities •9 minutes
Graded Quiz: Globalizing Cities•60 minutes
Governing the Global City
Module 7•3 hours to complete
Module details
In this module, you will explore urban governance issues and will engage with emerging issues such as deliberative democracy, e-governance, data governance, and new private actors (consultants and financial institutions, credit agencies) in shaping urban policy decisions and new laws to support the changes.
What's included
7 videos2 readings3 assignments
Show info about module content
7 videos•Total 64 minutes
Introduction to Governance: Definition, Principles, and Reasons•11 minutes
Deliberative Democracy: Participation and Evolution of E-Governance •11 minutes
Assemblage Urbanism and Splintered Cities •9 minutes
From Master Plan to Smart Projects •10 minutes
E-Governance and Data Governance •9 minutes
Future of Cities: Challenges and Opportunities and The Way Forward•11 minutes
Course Wrap-Up•2 minutes
2 readings•Total 60 minutes
Essential Readings: Urban Governance and Participatory Governance•30 minutes
Essential Readings: Emerging Approaches to Governance and its impact on Sustainability•30 minutes
3 assignments•Total 78 minutes
Urban Governance and Participatory Governance•9 minutes
Emerging Approaches to Governance and Its Impact on Sustainability•9 minutes
Graded Quiz: Governing the Global City•60 minutes
Build toward a degree
This course is part of the following degree program(s) offered by O.P. Jindal Global University. If you are admitted and enroll, your completed coursework may count toward your degree learning and your progress can transfer with you.Âą
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Build toward a degree
This course is part of the following degree program(s) offered by O.P. Jindal Global University. If you are admitted and enroll, your completed coursework may count toward your degree learning and your progress can transfer with you.Âą
ÂąSuccessful application and enrollment are required. Eligibility requirements apply. Each institution determines the number of credits recognized by completing this content that may count towards degree requirements, considering any existing credits you may have. Click on a specific course for more information.
O.P. Jindal Global University is recognised as an Institution of Eminence by the Ministry of Education, Government of India. It is also ranked the No. 1 Private University in India in the QS World University Rankings 2021. The university has 9000+ students across 12 schools that offer 52 degree programs. The university maintains a 1:9 faculty-student ratio.
It is a research-intensive university, deeply committed to institutional values of interdisciplinary and innovative learning, pluralism and rigorous scholarship, globalism, and international engagement.
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