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Decentralization of Urban Peoples and Manufacturing Activity in Canada*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  07 November 2014

David W. Slater*
Affiliation:
Queen's University
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Extract

The distribution of urban peoples and activities among cities of various sizes and characteristics has for a long time interested social critics, town planners, geographers, historians, journalists and some economists in western Europe and the United States. A common theme is that the distribution of urban peoples depends on the distribution of urban jobs. Thus to understand population changes, the analysis of cities usually becomes a study of trends in job location. A decentralized pattern of industrial jobs is thought conducive to a proliferation of small and medium-sized cities. Or to put it the other way, it is often suggested that the concentration of industrial jobs into large cities is a principal explanation of their size.

For more than half a century social critics and theorists have been predicting a coming era of decentralization in manufactures and, as a consequence, of urban peoples. The development of the automobile and of electricity, the use of mass production techniques in specialized single-storey buildings set on large tracts of land, improvements in telecommunications, a high income elasticity of demand for space—all of these have been suggested as forces tending to decentralize manufacturing employment. But what has in fact been the experience of the last half-century?

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Canadian Political Science Association 1961

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Footnotes

*

This paper, a revised version of one presented at the annual meeting of the Canadian Political Science Association in Kingston, June 10, 1960, is the third in a series of studies which are in varying stages of completion in the urban economic research programme at Queen's University. In this work the University has been supported by a grant from the Central Mortgage and Housing Corporation. The responsibility for the content of the studies, of course, lies with the authors, not with the Corporation.

References

1 Goodrich, C., et al., Migration and Economic Opportunity (Philadelphia, 1936).Google Scholar The chapters dealing with industrial decentralization were attributed to Daniel Creamer.

2 Woodbury, Coleman, ed., The Future of Cities and Urban Redevelopment (Chicago, 1953).Google Scholar

3 Kitagawa, E. M. and Bogue, D. J., Suburbanization of Manufacturing Activity within Standard Metropolitan Areas (Oxford, Ohio, 1955).Google Scholar