environmental science chapter 23
Which sustainable development goal is it to make cities and human settlements inclusive, safe, resilient, and sustainable
11
The seven largest megacities are in _____
Asia
what country prevents vehicle parking in the city center?
Geneva, Switzerland
In 1956, the ________ taxed gasoline and raised money for building roads
Highway Trust Fund
Many ____ cities are highly livable
Japanese
What makes cities an exciting place?
Jobs and cultural opportunities
what city is a leader in water planning?
Milwaukee, Wisconsin
What is the best city based off of transit ridership, congestion, air and water quality, green building, local food
Portland
_____ is the process where spreading development across the landscape exceeds population growth
Sprawl
What increased funding for mass transit?
The 1998 Transportation Equity Act
Megalopolis (urban agglomeration)
a chain of metropolitan regions
Metropolitan region
a city with suburbs, towns, and smaller cities; acts as a single economic zone where people work, shop, and travel throughout the whole area
urbanized area
a densely populated region dominated by human-built environment
what is urban sprawl?
a far-flung, urban-suburban network of low-density residential areas
Metropolis
a regional center for a whole area
Urbanization leads to _____
abandoned rural areas
what 2 continents are urbanizing the fastest
africa and asia
many cities have _____ and _____
aging pipes, infrastructure
What are some impacts of sprawl on health and environment?
air pollution, water (flooding, runoff, pollution, oil, fertilizers), loss of cropland (1.1 mill. acres/year), fragmentation of wildlife habitat
slums
areas of unplanned, crowded conditions
rural areas
areas with fewer people
Portland has decreased ____
automobile use
in 2013, Detroit filed for ______
bankruptcy
Atlanta's ____ is made-over abandoned rail and industrial corridor inside the beltway that will provide parks, trails, public transportation, etc
beltline
when a city slums become more livable, the entire city ____
benefits
people began moving to _______ in the 20th century
cities
why is it hard to move toward a sustainable community?
climate change and diversity loss
Values that promote the common good?
compassion for those less well off, concern for justice, honesty, sufficiency, humility, neighborliness
the key to sustainable urban life is
coordinated planning
2/3 of the largest cities are in _______ ; prone to flooding from rising sea levels and severe storms
costal deltas
Risks to public health associated with megacities
crowding, lack of clean water, sanitation, or electricity
_____ means the tax base declines when a lot of people leave a city
declining tax base
what type of technologies increase sustainability?
delta-driven
rural area will decline by 300 million people leading to....?
disparity in wealth and a loss of traditional cultures and institutions
habitat loss and fragmentation, overuse of groundwater, dumping of waste change what?
ecosystems and their services
using power plants using waste to generate electricity and heat for buildings is
efficient energy use
Slum residents are amazing ______
entrepreneurs
exurbs
even further out than suburbs
______ is the driving force behind urban sprawl and leads to segregation along economic and racial lines
exurban migration
______ removes purchasing power needed to support stores and businesses
exurban migration
greater efficiency
far lower per capita consumption of water and electricity
industrial agricultures machines increase the efficiency of _______
food production
turning run-down buildings into professional buildings and high rises is _____
gentrification
during what did the home loan defaults and the loss of businesses cause a ripple effect?
global recession
the U.S. sustainable Communities and Development program provides what to show the movement is succeeding?
grants
megacities
have more than 10 million people
in 2006 , the ________ burst and house prices plummeted
housing bubble
Returning vets and the resulting baby boom from WW2 created a ________
housing demand
environmental problems are at root are _____ not scientific or technical
human made
we can work towards sustainability using...
individual lifestyle choices, political involvement, membership in organizations, volunteer work, career choices
affordable, attractive housing is built around _____
industrial parks and malls
cities require a vast ______
infrastructure
rural areas have a lack of ________ and access to markets
infrastructure
public policies are essential, but depend on decisions made by _____
leaders
suburbs
less densely populated than cities but interact with cities more than rural area
have a high population density, preserve a mixture of homes, businesses, stores, let people meet informally on sidewalks, etc
livable cities
positive
longer lives, better health and education, etc
revitalizing cities must not come at the expense of ______
low income housing
life expectancy is _______ in cities
lower
city planners use big data and cloud computing to do what?
make decisions about growth and resource use, handle emergencies, build smart transportation systems, etc
_________ is associated with a lack of nature
mental illness
the poorest city dwellers are _____
minorities
the UN has programs to provide ____ and _____ to show cities how to run efficiently
money, support
Costal cities struggle with?
overfishing, heavy pollution
reducing the heat island effect includes
parks, green spaces, trees, plants on rooftops, efficient energy
negative
pollution, population growth, biodiversity loss climate change
local governments use property taxes for what?
public services and infrastructure
coordination and planning are needed to do what?
reduce sprawl, reduce traffic, improve foot access, use massive transit
slower population growth
reduced fertility rates
to be sustainable, we must____
reign in urban sprawl, revitalize our cities, and care for rural people
4 sprawl measurements?
residential density, neighborhood mix, accessibility of the street networks, strength of activity centers
in beginning of 20th century, most Americans lived in _____ areas
rural
most of the worlds population are ________
rural
city air is warmer than
rural air and suburban areas
cities in the _______ specialized in heavy manufacturing up to the mid 20th century
rust belt
1/3 of urban residents in developing nations live in _______
slums
_______ addresses sprawl by purposely developing in economically sustainable ways
smart growth
3 guiding principles to live on our planet are
sound science, stewardship, sustainability
__________ rural residents are poorer and have less access to health care and education
spatial inequality
lower numbers represent more ____
sprawl
________ can be a driving force for positive change
students
preventing minorities from leaving the city or improving its economy is
subtle racism
Urban sprawl exits because people believe it is better to live in ____
suburbs
White flight is white people moving to ____
suburbs
______ is hardest in slum areas
sustainability
what is a discriminatory lending practiced by banks and real estate agents?
systemic racism
stewardship
the actions and programs that manage natural resources and human well-being for the common good
urbanization
the increasing dominance of cities due to population growth and migration to cities
______ are communities that work together to respond to climate change and peak oil challenges
transition towns
sound science
understanding how the world works and how humans interact with it
Meeting the sustainable development goals means focusing on both _________
urban and rural areas
cities are warmer due to the ___
urban heat island effect
using your skills to reduce your environmental footprint in the city is called?
urban homesteading
___ is the process of exurban migration
urban sprawl
rural poverty is worsened by ______
urbanization
most sustainable cities are in _____
wealthy countries
slums provide an essential _______
workforce
sustainable communities require _____ to allow integration of stores, light industries, offices, and higher-density housing
zoning laws
______ a vicious cycle; is the process of exurban migration, decreased tax base, deteriorating real estate, and worsening schools
Urban blight (decay)
The end of ______ brought profound changes; few people has cars
WW2