Nijman Jan, Wei Yehua Dennis
Urban Studies Institute and Geosciences Department, Georgia State University, Atlanta, GA, 30303, USA.
Department of Geography, Planning, and International Development Studies, University of Amsterdam, the Netherlands.
Appl Geogr. 2020 Apr;117:102188. doi: 10.1016/j.apgeog.2020.102188. Epub 2020 Apr 2.
In the last decade or so, inequality studies have assumed renewed prominence across the social sciences. In this introduction to a special issue of , we set out to articulate the importance of urban spatial context in broader present-day inequality debates. We argue that the information-based economy is emphatically urban-based and that it has forged new spatial inequalities in and between cities and among urban populations. Income gaps have widened, inter-city disparities have grown, suburbs have been re-sorted into a wide array on the basis of class and race or ethnicity, and many central cities have assumed a renewed importance within metropolitan areas. We argue that attention to urban spatial dimensions at various scales is critical to understanding current inequality trends, from intra-urban to regional and global scales. Contributions to this special issue from North America, Europe, South America, and China suggest that deepening urban inequalities are pervasive across the globe.
在过去十年左右的时间里,不平等研究在社会科学领域再度受到关注。在本期特刊的引言中,我们旨在阐明城市空间背景在当今更广泛的不平等辩论中的重要性。我们认为,以信息为基础的经济明显以城市为基础,并且在城市内部、城市之间以及城市人口中形成了新的空间不平等。收入差距扩大,城市间差距增大,郊区根据阶级、种族或族裔重新划分为各种各样的类型,而且许多中心城市在大都市区内重新变得重要起来。我们认为,关注不同尺度的城市空间维度对于理解当前从城市内部到区域和全球尺度的不平等趋势至关重要。来自北美、欧洲、南美和中国的本期特刊投稿表明,全球范围内城市不平等的加剧现象普遍存在。