Urban System Analysis Through Behavioural Perception: Case of A City in Global South

被引:0
|
作者
Ghosh, Mainak [1 ]
Saha, Sayantani [1 ]
机构
[1] Jadavpur Univ, Dept Architecture, Kolkata, India
关键词
Cybernetics & System; Environmental Perception; Behaviour; Hawkers/Street Vendors; Urban Place;
D O I
10.6092/2281-4574/6633
中图分类号
TU98 [区域规划、城乡规划];
学科分类号
0814 ; 082803 ; 0833 ;
摘要
Cybernetics helps us understanding the nature of urban spaces with environmental and behavioural perception as the fundamental tools. Nowadays, unorganized encroachments of street vendors/ hawkers, slums etc. in urban areas are a growing problem in the developing countries of Global South, leading to conflicts and unplanned characteristics. This paper focuses on organizing the activities related to encroachments of street vendors/ hawkers occupying the sides of busy urban streets, by organizing the behaviour of the end users. An urban place can be analysed along with its users. Users behaviour during different activities gives different possibilities, proximal cues of an area, which can be formulated as self-sustaining and rotating 'System' and 'Sub-systems'. Street vending/ hawking on a busy urban street is related with many other sub-activities like buying of those goods and travelling simultaneously. These activities create a conflict and a situation of congestion and pandemonium. This paper will emphasise how environmental and behavioural perception can upgrade the 'System and Sub-systems' framed out of these hawking, buying and travelling activities, into an effective and flexible one with reduced nuisances by behavioural change. There is a question, "how people will react if their regular behaviour practice changes, will it be good to them or not?" Sometimes change in behaviour makes their activities easier, it is just the arrangement of what they want, what are the positive cues within their behaviour while doing the systematic activities or what they actually tend to.
引用
收藏
页码:51 / 74
页数:13
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Migrants' Narratives on Urban Governance: A Case from Kolkata, a City of the Global South
    Chakrabarti, Anuradha
    Tiwari, Reena
    Banerji, Haimanti
    [J]. SUSTAINABILITY, 2021, 13 (02) : 1 - 16
  • [2] Deep Learning the City: Quantifying Urban Perception at a Global Scale
    Dubey, Abhimanyu
    Naik, Nikhil
    Parikh, Devi
    Raskar, Ramesh
    Hidalgo, Cesar A.
    [J]. COMPUTER VISION - ECCV 2016, PT I, 2016, 9905 : 196 - 212
  • [3] Do Urban Food Deserts Exist in the Global South? An Analysis of Nairobi and Mexico City
    Wagner, Jeremy
    Hinton, Lucy
    McCordic, Cameron
    Owuor, Samuel
    Capron, Guenola
    Gonzalez Arellano, Salomon
    [J]. SUSTAINABILITY, 2019, 11 (07)
  • [4] Defining city boundaries through percolation theory: the case of the mexican urban system
    Tapia-McClung, Rodrigo
    Montejano-Escamilla, Jorge Alberto
    Caudillo-Cos, Camilo Alberto
    [J]. ECONOMIA SOCIEDAD Y TERRITORIO, 2023, 23 (73): : 753 - 778
  • [5] World city network: A global urban analysis
    Drennan, MP
    [J]. JOURNAL OF PLANNING EDUCATION AND RESEARCH, 2004, 24 (02) : 226 - 227
  • [6] World City Network: A Global Urban Analysis
    Timberlake, Michael
    Taylor, Peter
    [J]. JOURNAL OF WORLD-SYSTEMS RESEARCH, 2018, 24 (01): : 230 - 235
  • [7] World city network: a global urban analysis
    Witlox, F
    Derudder, B
    [J]. ENVIRONMENT AND PLANNING B-PLANNING & DESIGN, 2004, 31 (04): : 641 - 642
  • [8] World city network: a global urban analysis.
    Kim, Yeong-Hyun
    [J]. PROGRESS IN HUMAN GEOGRAPHY, 2007, 31 (01) : 131 - 133
  • [9] Urban and global populism: An analysis of Jakarta as Resilient City
    Sustikarini, A.
    Kabinawa, L. N. R. W.
    [J]. FRIENDLY CITY 4 FROM RESEARCH TO IMPLEMENTATION FOR BETTER SUSTAINABILITY, 2018, 126