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dc.contributor.author Kukreja, S
dc.contributor.editor Dayarathne, R
dc.contributor.editor Wijesundara, J
dc.date.accessioned 2024-03-27T08:41:53Z
dc.date.available 2024-03-27T08:41:53Z
dc.date.issued 2013-10-15
dc.identifier.uri http://dl.lib.uom.lk/handle/123/22419
dc.description.abstract Cities are born, and grow throughout ages; they deform under the assaults of life - an evolution more or less serene is disturbed by the repercussion of successive political-social–economic invasions. Urban processes, spatial transformations, urbanization, segregation, deterioration into slums, gentrification, pollution, and human migratory movements indicate upon the social issues facing us today. The depiction of different urban zones, local areas or neighborhoods is rarely a matter of drawing lines on a page: it now creates social categories, sets apart communal groups, and demarcates public problems to what David Harvey (1973) refers to as-the systematic 'urbanization of injustice'. Cities’ depicting these diversities is not only an urban fact but also a principal urban value. The question of how physical places with imbalanced distribution of civic resources and prejudiced land holdings pullulate often appears in urban analysis. How do cities as diverse, distended and desecrated expect safety, survival and future coherence for long? The author tries to focus in brief on the transformation of space in a city approached with problem of urban migration. Medium sized cities in India are perpetuating vulnerable spaces in wrath of boundaries and inequality. Most crucial to understand of urban equation today is ‘not that cities contain a lot of people and pack them in tightly but that cities need to rethink-revive and organize the differences between them for their future sustenance.’ en_US
dc.language.iso en en_US
dc.publisher Department of Architecture, University of Moratuwa en_US
dc.subject Urban planning en_US
dc.subject Urban transformations en_US
dc.subject Internal migration en_US
dc.subject Urban poverty en_US
dc.subject Social equity en_US
dc.title Beyond the ‘desire of the city’ urban boundaries & inequality en_US
dc.type Conference-Abstract en_US
dc.identifier.faculty Architecture en_US
dc.identifier.department Department of Architecture en_US
dc.identifier.year 2013 en_US
dc.identifier.conference International Urban Design Conference on Cities, People and Places en_US
dc.identifier.place Colombo, Sri Lanka en_US
dc.identifier.pgnos p. 62 en_US
dc.identifier.proceeding Proceedings of the International Urban Design Conference on Cities, People and Places en_US


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