
handle: 10722/249419
This article reports a multi-scale analysis of polycentric urban development in 22 Chinese city-regions. Using fine-grained population data, our analysis contrasts polycentric development patterns at multiple geographical scales. We present a typology of Chinese city-regions based on both (1) their inter-city polycentricity and (2) the intra-city polycentricity of the individual cities that comprise these urban regions. Overall, we find only limited levels of association between inter-city and intra-city polycentricity. The Pearl River and Yangtze River Deltas have high levels of inter-city and intra-city polycentricity. Most city-regions in Central and Western China are characterized by a primate urban system and low levels of inter-city polycentricity. We hypothesize the major economic, political, and geographical processes underlying observed patterns.
China, Public Administration, intra-city, multi-scale, CITIES, Environmental Studies, Social Sciences, Environmental Sciences & Ecology, Regional & Urban Planning, Polycentricity, EMERGENCE, inter-city, TRANSITIONAL ECONOMY, FUNCTIONAL POLYCENTRICITY, NETWORK, LAND-DEVELOPMENT, Science & Technology, Geography, GOVERNANCE, URBANIZATION, Urban Studies, MEGA-CITY-REGION, SPATIAL STRUCTURE, Life Sciences & Biomedicine
China, Public Administration, intra-city, multi-scale, CITIES, Environmental Studies, Social Sciences, Environmental Sciences & Ecology, Regional & Urban Planning, Polycentricity, EMERGENCE, inter-city, TRANSITIONAL ECONOMY, FUNCTIONAL POLYCENTRICITY, NETWORK, LAND-DEVELOPMENT, Science & Technology, Geography, GOVERNANCE, URBANIZATION, Urban Studies, MEGA-CITY-REGION, SPATIAL STRUCTURE, Life Sciences & Biomedicine
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