Neither urban nor rural: the 'urban' as a typology for thinking about the non-metropolitan city

Greene, Ricardo; de Abrantes, Lucia

Abstract

The urban/rural binary has been the basis from which Western's spatial thinking has been built. This dichotomy is not only used to oppose different forms of territorial occupation, but also to organize positions in the modernizing process. If the countryside is a primitive place where the notion of the traditional, poor and restrictive dominates, the modern metropolis is a versatile, rich and tolerant locus where civilizations bloom. Trying to overcome this dichotomy, and offering a model adjusted to the complexity of our spatial arrangements, this paper proposes that each space is made of different kinds of pieces, such as urban or rural, but focuses on defining the essential characteristics of a third type of territory: the non-metropolitan cities. Based on quantitative and qualitative work conducted in Chile and Argentina, it proposes four central variables that shape the territories' way-of-life, which we have called 'citadino': scale, rhythm, population and hierarchies.

Más información

Título según WOS: Neither urban nor rural: the 'urban' as a typology for thinking about the non-metropolitan city
Título de la Revista: EURE-REVISTA LATINOAMERICANA DE ESTUDIOS URBANO REGIONALES
Volumen: 47
Número: 141
Editorial: PONTIFICIA UNIV CATOLICA CHILE, INST ESTUDIOS URBANOS TERRITORIALES
Fecha de publicación: 2021
Página de inicio: 231
Página final: 250
DOI:

10.7764/EURE.47.141.11

Notas: ISI