Beria Paolo, Lunkar Vardhman
Dipartimento di Architettura e Studi Urbani, Politecnico di Milano, Italy.
Sustain Cities Soc. 2021 Feb;65:102616. doi: 10.1016/j.scs.2020.102616. Epub 2020 Nov 22.
The non-medical policies implemented by many countries to "flatten the curve" during the COVID-19 outbreak has people stranded in their homes and some, out of their homes unable to return due to the disruptions in the mobility network. The availability of rich datasets (in our case, Facebook) has made it possible to study the mobility dynamics and spatial distribution of people during lockdown in Italy. Our interpretation is an effort to look deeper, describing the movements occurred during lockdown, including the territorial differences. We observe that, initially, tourists left the country and later Italians abroad managed to return, thereby, stabilising the population. With regards to internal mobility, the earliest affected regions see higher number of stationary users in the initial days of the outbreak while this is less significant for the central/southern regions until the decree for the official lockdown on the 9th of March 2020, due 2 days later. Just before lockdown, there was not a significant exodus of people from the North to the rest of the country, instead, relocation of people between cities and their urban belts, but not towards remote areas. This will be elaborated in conclusions shedding light on possible changes in future cities.
在新冠疫情爆发期间,许多国家实施了“拉平曲线”的非医疗政策,这使得人们被困在家中,还有一些人因交通网络中断而离家后无法返回。丰富数据集(在我们的案例中是脸书数据)的可得性使得研究意大利封锁期间人们的流动动态和空间分布成为可能。我们的解读是一次更深入的尝试,描述封锁期间发生的移动情况,包括地域差异。我们观察到,最初,游客离开了该国,后来在国外的意大利人设法回国,从而使人口趋于稳定。关于国内流动,最早受影响的地区在疫情爆发的最初几天里有更多的固定用户,而对于中部/南部地区来说,直到2020年3月9日官方封锁令发布(两天后生效)之前,这种情况并不明显。就在封锁之前,并没有大量人口从北部流向该国其他地区,相反,人们在城市及其城市带之间迁移,但没有流向偏远地区。这将在结论中详细阐述,以揭示未来城市可能发生的变化。