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Linganisha mbinu

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Urban Resilience Assessment×Urban Scaling Laws×
NyanjaUrban StudiesUrban Studies
FamiliaProcess / pipelineRegression model
Mwaka wa asili20162007
MwanzilishiResilience-theory and urban-planning scholarship (synthesised by Meerow, Newell & Stults)Luís Bettencourt & Geoffrey West
AinaFramework or composite index assessing a city's capacity to absorb and adapt to disturbancePower-law regression of urban indicators against population size
Chanzo asiliaMeerow, S., Newell, J. P., & Stults, M. (2016). Defining urban resilience: A review. Landscape and Urban Planning, 147, 38–49. DOI ↗Bettencourt, L. M. A., Lobo, J., Helbing, D., Kühnert, C., & West, G. B. (2007). Growth, innovation, scaling, and the pace of life in cities. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 104(17), 7301–7306. DOI ↗
Majina mbadalaCity Resilience Index, Urban Resilience Framework, Resilience Capacity Assessment, Disaster Resilience of PlaceUrban Scaling, Settlement Scaling Theory, Power-Law Urban Scaling, Superlinear and Sublinear Urban Scaling
Zinazohusiana44
MuhtasariUrban resilience assessment evaluates how well a city can absorb, adapt to, and recover from shocks such as floods, earthquakes and pandemics and from chronic stresses such as poverty and ageing infrastructure. Most assessments are framework-driven composite indices: they define resilience dimensions — infrastructural, social, economic, ecological and institutional — gather indicators for each, normalise and weight them, and aggregate to a resilience score or profile. Because, as Meerow, Newell and Stults documented, 'urban resilience' is defined in conflicting ways across the literature, every assessment must first take a position on what resilience means, for whom, and against which disturbances.Urban scaling laws describe how the aggregate properties of cities — wealth, innovation, infrastructure, crime — change systematically with population size, following power laws rather than growing in simple proportion. Building on the 2007 work of Luís Bettencourt, Geoffrey West and colleagues, the framework shows that socioeconomic outputs typically scale superlinearly (a doubling of population more than doubles GDP and patents) while infrastructure scales sublinearly (larger cities need proportionally fewer roads and cables per person), with a single exponent β capturing the regularity across an entire urban system.
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ScholarGateLinganisha mbinu: Urban Resilience Assessment · Urban Scaling Laws. Imepatikana 2026-06-25 kutoka https://scholargate.app/sw/compare