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Evolution of urban scaling: evidence from Brazil
- Source :
- PLoS ONE, Repositório Institucional da USP (Biblioteca Digital da Produção Intelectual), Universidade de São Paulo (USP), instacron:USP, PLoS ONE, Vol 13, Iss 10, p e0204574 (2018)
- Publication Year :
- 2018
- Publisher :
- arXiv, 2018.
-
Abstract
- During the last years, the new science of municipalities has been established as a fertile quantitative approach to systematically understand the urban phenomena. One of its main pillars is the proposition that urban systems display universal scaling behavior regarding socioeconomic, infrastructural and individual basic services variables. This paper discusses the extension of the universality proposition by testing it against a broad range of urban metrics in a developing country urban system. We present an exploration of the scaling exponents for over 6$ variables for the Brazilian urban system. As Brazilian municipalities can deviate significantly from urban settlements, urban-like municipalities were selected based on a systematic density cut-off procedure and the scaling exponents were estimated for this new subset of municipalities. To validate our findings we compared the results for overlaying variables with other studies based on alternative methods. It was found that the analyzed socioeconomic variables follow a superlinear scaling relationship with the population size, and most of the infrastructure and individual basic services variables follow expected sublinear and linear scaling, respectively. However, some infrastructural and individual basic services variables deviated from their expected regimes, challenging the universality hypothesis of urban scaling. We propose that these deviations are a product of top-down decisions/policies. Our analysis spreads over a time-range of 10 years, what is not enough to draw conclusive observations, nevertheless we found hints that the scaling exponent of these variables are evolving towards the expected scaling regime, indicating that the deviations might be temporally constrained and that the urban systems might eventually reach the expected scaling regime.<br />Comment: 14 pages, 6 figures
- Subjects :
- Time Factors
Economics
ESPAÇO URBANO
0211 other engineering and technologies
lcsh:Medicine
Social Sciences
02 engineering and technology
Economic Geography
Geographical locations
Scaling Laws
Econometrics
Microeconomics
Medicine and Health Sciences
lcsh:Science
Geographic Areas
Multidisciplinary
Ecology
Sewage
Geography
Population size
05 social sciences
021107 urban & regional planning
Complex Systems
Environment, Controlled
Urban Economics
Engineering and Technology
Social Planning
050703 geography
Brazil
Research Article
Urban Areas
Physics - Physics and Society
Environmental Engineering
0507 social and economic geography
Complex system
Developing country
Solid Waste Management
FOS: Physical sciences
Physics and Society (physics.soc-ph)
Health Economics
Human settlement
Humans
Urban Ecology
Cities
Scaling
Socioeconomic status
Developing Countries
Population Density
Sewage Treatment
lcsh:R
Ecology and Environmental Sciences
Biology and Life Sciences
Models, Theoretical
South America
Universality (dynamical systems)
Health Care
Urban economics
Socioeconomic Factors
Earth Sciences
Urban Science
lcsh:Q
Sanitary Engineering
People and places
Subjects
Details
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- PLoS ONE, Repositório Institucional da USP (Biblioteca Digital da Produção Intelectual), Universidade de São Paulo (USP), instacron:USP, PLoS ONE, Vol 13, Iss 10, p e0204574 (2018)
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....ca335388b546629d05ed7e6ae0a755d6
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.48550/arxiv.1807.02292