Title: The study of cities: historical and structural approaches
1The study of cities historical and structural
approaches
2The study of cities historical and structural
approaches
- 1. Historical and structural approaches
- structural approaches relate to the logic of a
system - historical approaches relate to causal chains
- 2. The real methodological problem of
historiography - the use of knowledge of outcomes in the
analysis of the past - ? how to avoid historical necessity
- 2 strategies
- investigating periods in which the outcome is
still undetermined - combining historical and structural approaches
3The study of cities historical and structural
approaches
- A critical analysis of the replacement of
Christallerian ideas about central places by
Taylorian ideas about global cities. - Taylor has developed his ideas on the basis of a
rejection of state-centric and afterwards
territorial thinking. - The background of my analysis is
- (i) the rejection of the so-called morphogenetic
approach in the pre-positivist urban geography of
the first half of the twentieth century - (ii) the narrowing down of the field of
application of central place theory.
4The study of cities historical and structural
approaches
- 3. Bobek-Christaller-Barton
- rejection of the historial approach of
explaining the location of urban settlements by
site and situation - Bobek (1927) urban settlements are nodes in a
network of flows - Christaller (1933) (spatial) structure
- Barton (1978) agency (entrepreneurs)
- 2 kinds of centrality
- Christallerian analysis as structural approach
- 4. From B.C.B. to P.J.T.
- Hall (2002) Christaller for a global age
- ? Christallers theory, Taylors conception of
the world city network -
5The study of cities historical and structural
approaches
- 5. Pirenne-Jacobs-Taylor
- the legitimacy of the concept cities as
transhistorical entities - Pirenne, Jacobs city-based view of history
with inter-city relations as the formative force - Pirenne historical approach
- Jacobs, Taylor structural approach
- Jacobs transubstantiation
- Taylor abstraction
-
- 6. The structural approach structures the
historical approach - Determination of the unit of analysis
- Example of the archipelago of cities 1250-1350
(Abu Lughod)
61. Historical and structural approaches
- a structural approach relates to the logic of
systems, - a historical approach relates to
- (i) the examination of idiographic causal
chains chains of causes and human purposes and
motives, and their intended or unintended results
and the possible generalisations or general
historical trends that can be deduced from the
investigation of these chains, - (ii) the actual formation, development and
disintegration of systems, - e.g.
- the analysis of the world system 1250-1350 by
Janet Abu-Lughod -
72. The real methodological problem of
historiography
- The use of knowledge of outcomes in the analysis
of past events - E.g. the economic and political hegemony of the
West in modern times -
- examining ex post factor of this outcome and
then reasoning backward, to rationalize why this
supremacy had to be - ?
- conveys the impression that the rise of the West
was an inherent historical necessity
82. The real methodological problem of
historiography
- Strategies to avoid the pitfall of historical
necessity - 1. Abu-Lughod
- Investigation of a period in which the outcome is
still undetermined - 2. Combination of historical approach and
structural approach - - Difference between existential necessity and
necessary existence - - Reasoning backward is a legitimate procedure
(retroduction or abduction) - - Difference between structural causality and
efficient causality
92. The real methodological problem of
historiography
- Strategies to avoid the pitfall of historical
necessity - 2. Combination of structural and historical
approaches - In Aristotelian terms
- the structural approach should reveal formal
causes, - the historical approach should reveal efficient
and final causes. - In present-day language
- structure is causally effective, it constrains
and enables, - agency is causally efficient,
- human agency is intentionally causally
efficient.
10The study of cities historical and structural
approaches
- A critical analysis of the replacement of
Christallerian ideas about central places by
Taylorian ideas about global cities - to reveal the implications of the second strategy
-
113. Bobek Christaller - Barton
- Bobek (1927)
- Grundfragen der Stadtgeographie (Basic questions
of urban geography) - Um städtische Siedlungen hervorzurufen, ist die
Zusammenraffung, die Konzentration, die Brechung
dieser Verkehrsfäden an gewissen Punkten nötig - The gathering, the concentration, the breaking
of these threads of traffic in certain points is
necessary to bring about urban settlements. - In present-day language
- Urban settlements come into being as nodes in
networks of flows of traffic.
123. Bobek Christaller - Barton
- Bobek (1927)
- Bobek reacted against the morphogenetic approach
in urban geography - the description of the site or topographic
location of the urban settlement, - the description of the situation or geographic
location of the urban settlement, - the historical development of the urban
settlement insofar as it is connected to the site
and situation - the urban settlement as part of the broader
landscape and as a landscape in itself. - Bobek argued that this approach only dealt with
superficial characteristics of urban settlements.
If geography wanted to say more interesting
things about urban settlements, it should focus
on their function als lebendigen
Wirtschafskörpers innerhalb des
Wirtschaftsgetriebes der Landschaft as living
economic bodies within the economic machinery of
the landscape. Further in the article Bobek
extended the notion of traffic to political and
cultural communication.
133. Bobek Christaller - Barton
- Bobek (1927)
- In dieser Ansichziehung aller früher
ungeordeneten Verkehrsfäden, welche sich so wie
durch die Wirkung eines Magnetpols zu einem
radialen Netze um die städtische Siedlung
anordnen, scheint uns das geographisches Faßbare
und Wesentliche an städtischer Wirtschaft zu
liegen. Den Namen Stadt können nur solche Orte
verdienen, welche eine derartige beherrschende
Stellung im wirtschaftlichen, kulturellen und
politischen Verkehr eines Gebietes besitzen. - It appears to us that the geographically
explicable and essential aspects of the urban
economy are to be found in this attraction of all
formerly unordered threads of traffic that are
organized into a radial network around the urban
settlement as if the latter function like a
magnetic pole. Only those places that hold such a
controlling position in economic, cultural and
political communications deserve the name of
Stadt (town, city).
143. Bobek Christaller BartonChristaller (1933)
153. Bobek Christaller - Barton
- Bobek (1927) network of flows
- Christaller (1933) spatial structure
- Christallers theory meets the requirements of a
scientific explanation. - Science explains a fact when it is able to
establish that the fact - was possible at time T1 and place P1, but
- impossible at time T2 and place P1, and at time
T1 and place P2. - This definition of scientific explanation
conveys the idea that a fact could not have
happened in another way than it actually did,
without being inevitable. - The method of abstraction is at the origin of the
methodological success of Christaller.
163. Bobek Christaller - Barton
- Bobek (1927) network of flows
- Christaller (1933) spatial structure
- Barton (1978) agency
- The creation of centrality, AAAG
- Barton rejects the neoclassical framework in
which the received theory of central places is
formulated and defends an entrepreneurial/exchange
framework based on classical economics. - Centrality arises from the activities of the
entrepreneur, which can be a merchant, a trader,
a retailer, a wholesaler, a banker.
173. Bobek Christaller - Barton
183. Bobek Christaller - Barton
- Two kinds of centrality
- centrality generated by central functions that
serve households (including consumer services,
education, administration, and so on)
(Christaller) - process of town formation (Taylor)
-
- centrality generated by producer services
(Barton) - process of city formation (Taylor)
193. Bobek Christaller - Barton
- Christallers theory as structural approach
- Distinction between spatial system and system of
agents figuration - Logic of a system the functioning of the system
according to the rules of figuration when the
agents act completely according to these rules - Rules of figuration resulting in the spatial
arrangement of central places - - suppliers locate either as closely as
possible to each other or as far away as
possible from each other - consumers patronize the nearest central place
- Rules of figuration to maintain the system of
suppliers and consumers - (the entire body of rules without which the
society concerned would disintegrate) -
204. From B.C.B to P.J.T.
- Hall (2002) Christaller for a global age
- Drops the three lowest levels because the
settlements concerned have ceased to perform any
significant role as central places - Adds two new levels above the L-centres the
global cities and the sub-global cities, which he
identifies with the alpha global cities and beta
or gamma global cities from the
GaWC-classification of global cities. - ? Christallers theory
- ? Taylors conception of the world city network
214. From B.C.B to P.J.T.
224. From B.C.B to P.J.T.
- Connectivity of cities replaces hierarchy of
towns - Christaller towns servicing households in a
hinterland - Taylor cities as locations of producer services
servicing a hinterworld - Nevertheless central places
- ?
- Questions about the relation between central
places and economic development (growth pole
mechanisms and state intervention) - To what degree does the key position of producer
services entail a coordinating or even organizing
role of these services in capital accumulation
(global cities and commodity chains)? - ?
- Question about the legitimacy of the notion of
cities as transhistorical entities
235. Pirenne-Jacobs-Taylor
- Transubstantiation
- Procedures to neutralize the importance of social
classes - Abstraction Man appears in the shape of Economic
Man - Banalization no particular role of social
classes - Transubstatiation Man appears in the shape of
(Wagnerian) Ecological Man - Conception of cities as transhistorical entities
- variant of transubstantiation (Man appears in
the shape of Jacobsian Innovative City Man) ?
245. Pirenne-Jacobs-Taylor
- Pirenne Medieval Cities
- History is obliged to recognize that, however
briljant it seems in other respects, the cycle of
Charlemagne, considered from an economic
viewpoint, is a cycle of regression. The
ninth century is the golden age of what we have
called the closed domestic economy and which we
might call, with more exactidude, the economic of
no markets Te period which opened with the
Carolingian era knew cities neither in the social
sense, nor in the economic sense, nor in the
legal sense of the word. - The abbey-merchants were not free
agents, but employees exclusively in the service
of their masters. It is not apparent that any of
them ever carried on business on his own
account. - European history
- Development of commerce by a strong independent
middle class - Creation of cities with a strong middle class
255. Pirenne-Jacobs-Taylor
- Jacobs The economy of cities, The nature of
economics - World history Development of networks of cities,
economic parentage - The development of forces of production is
- not alternately promoted and hindered by the
relations of production (Marx) - not caused by the development of Mans creative
capacities through his exploitation of the
physical environment (Ratzel, Ecological Man) - not caused by applying best practices of
allocation (Economic Man) - but caused by the victory of the innovators in a
permanent economic conflict between innovators
and conservatives (Innovative City Man) - transubstantitiation
265. Pirenne-Jacobs-Taylor
- Taylor Cities within spaces of flows, Cities and
states - Abstraction 1 Creating a fiction (Economic Man)
- Abstraction 2 Focusing on a selected number of
qualities of the study object, defined at a
certain spatiotemporal level - Transhistorical entities
- Pirenne historical approach, same causes same
effects - Taylor structural approach, moral syndromes
rules of figuration
276. The structural approach structures the
historical approach
- Determination of the unit of analysis
- World city network as interlocking network
- Level of the network world-economy
- Nodal level cities (local networks of
institutions) - Sub-nodal level producer service firms
- Agency
- Firms, cities, sectors, nation-states
- Interaction causal nexuses, identity assignments
286. The structural approach structures the
historical approach
- Determination of the unit of analysis
- World city network
- System of agents a complex of internally related
elements defined at the appropriate level of
spatiotemporal abstraction, Wallersteins modern
world-system in the ongoing phase of intensified
globalization - Logic the functioning of the network according
to the rules of the causal nexuses and identity
assignments when the four agents act completely
according to these rules - ? Structural approach determines the causal
chains to be investigated by the historical
approach
296. The structural approach structures the
historical approach
- Determination of the unit of analysis
- Abu-Lughod World system in formation 1250-1350
(archipelago of cities) - Transformation into an integrated world system
has not been realized because the subsystems
followed their own path of development to such a
degree that the trade network was not able to
integrate them and fragmented - In structural terms
- The creation of a world-system failed because the
systems to be integrated followed their own logic
to such a degree that the trade network was not
able to develop a logic of its own - ? No system, no subsystems, no unit of analysis,
no investigation of commodity chains
306. The structural approach structures the
historical approach
- Determination of the unit of analysis
- Misleading use of terms
- The term world system, as it is currently
used, has unfortunately been conflated with the
particular hierarchical structure of organization
that developed from the sixteenth century onward.
This makes debates over world systems less than
fruitful. It is important to remember that a
system is simply a whole composed of parts in
orderly arrangement according to some scheme
(Oxford Dictionary). - Issue is not similarity to the modern
world-system, but - existence of complexes of internal relations
between agents exhibiting a logic of their own