Academic literature on the topic 'City and production'

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Journal articles on the topic "City and production"

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Ferdous, Md Salehin, Sabrina Tasnim, Arifuzzaman ., and Md Rumman Rafi. "Green Technology: Production of Biogas from Solid Wastage of Dhaka City." International Journal of Science and Research (IJSR) 8, no. 8 (August 5, 2019): 2134–37. http://dx.doi.org/10.21275/art2020377.

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Fellbe, Bengt. "The city FEEDS the city and FERTILIZES the countryside: sustainable food production." Open Access Government 36, no. 1 (October 11, 2022): 430–31. http://dx.doi.org/10.56367/oag-036-8884.

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The city FEEDS the city and FERTILIZES the countryside: sustainable food production The circular and sustainable food production system of the future is already here. FaaS - Farming as a Service has been launched in Sweden through ICA Maxi in Sundsvall. GreenFood, together with Agtira, is making a major joint investment in urban farming with vertical farms in Sweden. The basis for this sustainable development is innovative FoodTech companies as JUMO, SentianAI, Solserv and Ekobalans. Technologies for producing fish and vegetables safely and sustainably in closed systems, as well as taking advantage of and refining valuable residual flows in our cities.
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Alwan Mohammed, Dr Hamid, MM Mohammed Jassim Hammadi, and MM Khamis Ghazi Khalf. "Pure Water Production in The City Wajihiya." ALUSTATH JOURNAL FOR HUMAN AND SOCIAL SCIENCES 216, no. 2 (November 11, 2018): 93–112. http://dx.doi.org/10.36473/ujhss.v216i2.592.

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The study issue was investigating the reality of drinking water sufficiency in the cities of the district according to the efficiency of the service. The results have come up with the following: The daily production capacity of the refineries does not fulfill the needs of these cities due to the demographic, urban, and commercial growth in them. There is a flaw in spatial distribution of water refineries in the cities of the district. The actual production of clean water facilities in the study area in 2013 is 1287 m3/day. Accordingly, the share of a single person is 125m3/ person/day which is the less than the approved criteria of a person's need of clean water which is 360 m3/ person/day
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Hatuka, Tali. "Industrial Urbanism: Exploring the City–production Dynamic." Built Environment 43, no. 1 (March 1, 2017): 5–9. http://dx.doi.org/10.2148/benv.63.3.5.

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Richardson, Glenn E., Alan Burns, and Janet Falcone. "Environmental Health Simulations: Island City and Production." Health Education 17, no. 5 (November 1986): 75–76. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00970050.1986.10618018.

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He, Hongyan, Leonard Ortolano, and Hanchang Shi. "Cleaner production programme in Taiyuan City, China." International Journal of Technology Transfer and Commercialisation 2, no. 1 (2003): 65. http://dx.doi.org/10.1504/ijttc.2003.001802.

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Holmes, Thomas J. "Scale of Local Production and City Size." American Economic Review 89, no. 2 (May 1, 1999): 317–20. http://dx.doi.org/10.1257/aer.89.2.317.

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Benabou, R. "Workings of a City: Location, Education, and Production." Quarterly Journal of Economics 108, no. 3 (August 1, 1993): 619–52. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/2118403.

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Dahou, Mohamed El Amine, and Abdelkader Touzi. "Biogas Production from Adrar City Lagoon Station's Sludge." International Review of Mechanical Engineering (IREME) 10, no. 2 (March 31, 2016): 107. http://dx.doi.org/10.15866/ireme.v10i2.7951.

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SHIMOMURA, Yasuhiro. "Cultural Production in the Old Industrial Inner City:." Annals of Japan Association for Urban Sociology 2015, no. 33 (2015): 88–104. http://dx.doi.org/10.5637/jpasurban.2015.88.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "City and production"

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SANTOS, DANIEL TEIXEIRA DOS. "THE SPACE PRODUCTION OF NOVA FRIBURGO CITY." PONTIFÍCIA UNIVERSIDADE CATÓLICA DO RIO DE JANEIRO, 2014. http://www.maxwell.vrac.puc-rio.br/Busca_etds.php?strSecao=resultado&nrSeq=24139@1.

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PONTIFÍCIA UNIVERSIDADE CATÓLICA DO RIO DE JANEIRO
COORDENAÇÃO DE APERFEIÇOAMENTO DO PESSOAL DE ENSINO SUPERIOR
PROGRAMA DE SUPORTE À PÓS-GRADUAÇÃO DE INSTS. DE ENSINO
Na contemporaneidade, a intensidade dos processos e a velocidade dos acontecimentos marcam as relações humanas e as relações que estas estabelecem com o espaço. A sociedade é alvo de mudanças que alteram a rede de relações que a sustenta, relações entre sociedade e a natureza, estabelecidas a partir do trabalho. A produção do espaço é iminente à produção da sociedade no movimento histórico da sua reprodução. Neste Sentido, objetivamos entender a produção do espaço da cidade de Nova Friburgo inserido no conjunto de relações que dão conteúdo e sentido à vida da cidade, tendo espaço e desenvolvimento como os principais conceitos norteadores da pesquisa. Objetivamos realizar uma crítica ao modelo capitalista e a razão ocidental como pressuposto da mundialização que tem como propósito manter as estruturas de poder e exploração, e não o desenvolvimento autônomo de lugares, ou seja, aqueles lugares em que quando é explorada as tradições pode-se gerar um desenvolvimento livre sem imposições de agentes externos à comunidade. O objeto da dissertação é o processo mais recente de produção e reprodução do espaço urbano da cidade de Nova Friburgo baseado em um modelo capitalista de acumulação flexível e conceitos de metropolização e modernidade, construídos socialmente, estabeleceram condições de risco em um sítio susceptível a deslizamentos, que a partir de inúmeras apropriações torna-se urbano. Neste sentido é necessário investigar as contradições do processo de urbanização que se manifestam na cidade de uma forma desigual e combinada.
In contemporaneity, the intensification of the processes and speed of events marks human relationships and, the relationships they establish with the space. Society is subject to changes, which can changes the relationships that sustain it, relations between society and nature, which is connected by work. The production of space is imminent production of society in the historic movement of reproduction, in this sense; the objective of the paper is to analyze the production of the city of Nova Friburgo inserted in the space of relations that give content and meaning to everyday life city in actuality, having space and development as the fundamental concepts of the paper. We intend to realize an criticism to capitalist model and globalization presupposes that aims to maintain the structures of power and exploitation, and not to encourage the autonomous development, it means the rising of those spaces that when traditions are explored can generates a free development without external impositions of the community. We have as object of the paper the most recent production and reproduction process of urban space in the Nova Friburgo city based on a capitalist system, flexible accumulation and concepts of metropolisation and modernity, that are socially constructed, established risk conditions at a site liable to landslides, which from numerous appropriations becomes urban. In this sense it is necessary to investigate the contradictions of the urbanization process manifested in the city in unequal and combined forms.
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Gokyer, Gokcen. "The Commercial Real Estates Production In Istanbul In The Globalization Process." Master's thesis, METU, 2012. http://etd.lib.metu.edu.tr/upload/12614981/index.pdf.

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Istanbul undertakes about half of the imports and exports of the country which has been increasing the importance. It is the most developed city in Turkey with a population reaching up to 13.255.685 people in 2010 consisting of %17.98 of the national population. The service sector demand and the real estate production are expected to be high together with the Istanbul&rsquo
s rising position in the globalization process. Upon the increase in demand for global sectors, the production of the commercial real estate tends to increase, which can be observed from construction statistics that are published by the Turkish Statistical Institute. The world city literature developed in several respects. As to the world city/global city concept, there are three main theories that play major roles in understanding the emergence of global command centers and strongly influenced the world city literature that belong to John Friedmann, Saskia Sassen and Manuel Castells. Developments in lines with the world city/global city concept appeared in Istanbul with the 1980&rsquo
s reforms towards economic liberalization, together with the support of the Government to make Istanbul a &lsquo
global city&rsquo
. The city is the primary gateway of Turkey to the global economy and Istanbul has been well ranked in academic rosters of world cities since the beginning of the 21 st century. v When the case of Istanbul is considered, the city as a world city is expected to be relatively at an earlier stage of globalization process, and with respect to these major theories
the attribution of Istanbul seems to have similarity with Friedmann&rsquo
s (1986) &lsquo
world city&rsquo
vision. The main data that reflect the supply of commercial real estate as related to demand in the globalization process are obtained from the data of the Turkish Statistical Institute (TUIK), under the published categories of &lsquo
Hotel and etc constructions&rsquo
, &lsquo
Office, Wholesale and Retail Commerce&rsquo
, &lsquo
Traffic and Communication Buildings&rsquo
, &lsquo
Industry and Storage&rsquo
, and &lsquo
Public, Entertainment, Education and Hospital&rsquo
. In order to figure out the place of Istanbul in the globalization process in the country, Istanbul&rsquo
s data are compared with the same data for Ankara and Izmir comprising the years between 2002 and 2010. It is aimed to figure out the developed sectors of Istanbul and to clarify how Istanbul is leading in the production of real estate for the global sectors of both manufacturing and service activities. The developments in respect of globalization process of the city can be expected in the direction of the formation of world city as defined in line with the Friedmann&rsquo
s theory, since not only buildings for service sector activities are produced in Istanbul, but also industrial real estate production at almost equal level during much of the investigated period. It is expected that global city functions, in lines with the Saskia Sassen&rsquo
s framework will develop as world city functions consolidate in Istanbul. Therefore, the commercial real estate production is expected to be more rapid and more in line with the growth of world city functions in Istanbul, compared to two other most developed cities of Turkey which are Ankara and Izmir.
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NÄÄS, LISA. "Production system of composite sidepanel for urban city car." Thesis, KTH, Maskinkonstruktion (Inst.), 2011. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:kth:diva-148096.

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A theoretical study of possible production systems for future production of a side panel made ofcomposite material and belonging to an urban city car has been carried out. The study has takenplace within Team H2politO at the Polytechnic University of Turin in Italy. Three different productionvolumes have been analyzed considering dimensional limits, economy, production rate, machinery,material and environment. These have been set to 1 000, 10 000 and 100 000 components/year.Previous studies within the field have been analyzed, combined and used as a basis in order to arriveat an appropriate choice of production methodology regarding the different production volumes. Acomparison with production methods for the side panel if it would have been manufactured withaluminum has been made and the profitability of composite production has been evaluated.Production‐ and material data have been collected from the software CES EduPack and revised basedon study visits and interviews. The side panel has thereafter been edited and dimensioned in termsof recommendations for optimization of a future production. Modeling has been made usingAutodesk Alias Design, Photoshop and Edraw Max. Furthermore, overview plan drawings ofproduction plants have been made.The study has given results in terms of recommendations and requirement specifications for futureprojects within the field. For continued studies about the profitability of composite production, anaccurate study about different composite materials including tests of material characteristics issuggested. A detailed plan of the production plant with exact dimensions and technical data foroptimization of production time is also recommended. In addition to this, it is essential to develop abetter assembly system between the side panel and the roof panel as well as investigate thepossibility of a more profitable production method for medium‐ to large scale production ofcomposite details.
En teoretisk studie av möjliga produktionssystem för framtida produktion av en sidopanel ikompositmaterial på en stadsbil har utförsts. Studien har ägt rum inom Team H2politO på TekniskaHögskolan i Turin i Italien. Tre olika produktionsvolymer har analyserats med avseende pådimensionsgränser, ekonomi, produktionstid, maskineri, material och miljö. Dessa har valts till 1 000,10 000 respektive 100 000 komponenter/år. Tidigare studier inom ämnet har analyserats,kombinerats och använts som underlag för att komma fram till lämpligt val av produktionsmetod förde olika produktionsvolymerna. En jämförelse med produktionsmetoder för sidopanelen om denskulle ha varit tillverkad i aluminium har gjorts och lönsamheten av komposittillverkning förkomponenten har utvärderats. Produktions‐ och materialdata har hämtats ur datorprogrammet CESEduPack samt reviderats utifrån studiebesök och intervjuer. Sidopanelen har därefter med hjälp avrekommendationer anpassats och dimensionerats för att optimera en framtida produktion.Modellering har skett i datorprogrammet Autodesk Alias Design, Photoshop och Edraw Max.Ytterligare har översiktsritningar på produktionsanläggningar gjorts.Studien har gett resultat i form av rekommendationer och kravspecifikationer för framtida projektinom området. För fortsatta studier inom lönsamheten av kompositproduktion föreslås ennoggrannare analys av olika kompositmaterial samt tester av materialegenskaper. En detaljritning avproduktionsanläggningen med mer exakta mått och tekniska data för optimering av produktionstidrekommenderas också. Utöver dessa förslag, är det nödvändigt att utveckla en bättre lösning påmontering mellan sidopanelen och takpanelen samt en mer lönsam produktionsmetod för medel‐ tillmassproduktion av kompositdetaljer.
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Tovares, Charles. "Race and the production of public space /." Thesis, Connect to this title online; UW restricted, 2003. http://hdl.handle.net/1773/5635.

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Forslund, Alexander. "Tiles of the City." Thesis, KTH, Arkitektur, 2017. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:kth:diva-206478.

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Umeå är en av de städer i Sverige som växer snabbast och innerstaden behöver förtätas för att lyckas tillgodose framtidens behov av bostäder. Att förtäta medför ett ansvar att ta hänsyn till stadens invånare och existerande byggnader. Det är framförallt unga vuxna som drabbas av bostadsbristen. Undersökningar har visat att många av de unga vuxna skulle vilja bo tillsammans med andra istället för att bo själva. Projektet förtätar varsamt en centralt placerad tomt i staden genom att dels bygga bostäder på underutnyttjad mark och dels genom att bygga på en redan existerande byggnad. Däremellan skapas samtidigt en innergård som delvis är publik. Projektet undersöker också ingående material och tektoniska aspekter genom att utveckla en keramisk fasad i hög detaljnivå. Undersökningen av det keramiska materialet bedrivs genom studieresor, tillverkning och modellering i fullskala. Projektet förser tomten I Umeå med ett genomtänkt förslag på förtätning av staden genom att kombinera undersökningar i både stor och liten skala.
The fast growing city of Umeå needs to densify its inner city as a strategy to cope with its current and future housing situation. Densifying comes with a responsibility to care both for the existing inhabitants’ needs and the city’s built structures. It is largely young adults who are affected from the housing shortage. They often want to share their apartment with others, rather than living alone. The project deals with careful densification of a centrally located site by creating new structures on underused space, by adding to the already built and by creating a public space in-between. Furthermore, the project investigates the building’s material and tectonical aspects by developing a ceramic façade in detail. The investigation of the ceramic material is carried out through study trips, fabrication and modelling in full scale. The project provides the site in Umeå with an accurate solution for densified housing combining both large and small scale investigation.
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Boghani, Amar K. (Amar Kapadia). "The city expressed : everyday media production and the urban environment." Thesis, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 2013. http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/81077.

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Thesis (S.M.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Comparative Media Studies, 2013.
Cataloged from PDF version of thesis.
Includes bibliographical references (p. 111-115).
Our interactions with cities are increasingly mediated through a complex array of technologies, including location-aware mobile devices and a vast number of online platforms. However, we often also use these tools to create content about the places that we live in and travel through. My thesis examines what I define as "place-based media," that is, user-generated content produced about place. This content - photos of street life, overheard quotes, and local reviews, for example - emerges out of daily routines, and has a reciprocal relationship with the urban environment, both contributing to, as well as reflecting the life of the city. In this thesis, I aim to explore the relationship between the technologies and practices involved in the production of place-based media. In my approach, I situate place-based media within relevant historical precedents, such as street photography. In addition, I examine content produced about a single neighborhood, Central Square, Cambridge, in order to better understand the social and affective qualities of content that is created in dialogue with place. Ultimately, this project examines the production of place-based media as an everyday urban practice, with an eye towards the potential implications these media could have for contemporary cities and city neighborhoods.
by Amar K. Boghani.
S.M.
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Chung, Connie Jean. "Creating the city : toward 21st-century production in Brooklyn, NY." Thesis, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 2009. http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/49688.

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Thesis (M.C.P.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Urban Studies and Planning, 2009.
Includes bibliographical references.
In the past decade, the creative city discourse has pulsated with activity, with academics, policy wonks, national organizations, and community non-profits attempting to find footholds in the conversation. By applying the lessons of 20th-century industrial complexes, or "technopoles," to a new conception of production in the 21st century, city builders, planners, and business developers tackle the new role of fitting the commercial creative sector into Castells's 'networks' and this creative city discourse, in order to generate innovation in the creative city. The thesis aims to closely examine the role that for-profit creative production now plays in the 21st century urban economic engine and the ways in which synergy may be created by and among many individual creative firms in the city. The thesis uses the borough of Brooklyn, in New York City, as a case and example of how to go about supporting new kinds of urban creative clusters. The thesis proposes principles, guidelines, and an approach to cluster development, not as a universal solution for currently uncoordinated clustering, but as a place-based example for applying the principles of this thesis. I will review the evolution of 21st-century production and the emergence of the creative economy, including the case for locating creative production centers in metropolitan locales, in order to illustrate the shape of the new production landscape in the creative city.
(cont.) I next present a framework for organizing and developing a 21st-century creative cluster, and outline fourteen key ingredients to their development. Finally, I apply this framework to a creative-cluster development strategy in Brooklyn, identifying three possible areas of intervention where creative firms already operate, and propose a public-private management entity structure to provide the necessary synergistic 'glue.'
by Connie Jean Chung.
M.C.P.
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Browning, Yanto. "Theorising the music city: Play, placemaking, political economy, and music production in the ‘undersong’ of the city." Thesis, Queensland University of Technology, 2022. https://eprints.qut.edu.au/232624/1/Yanto_Browning_Thesis.pdf.

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This thesis contributes new knowledge about music cities and relies on the key concept of what I define as a city’s ‘undersong’. I define undersong as the aural foundations of a city from a political economy and placemaking perspective. It includes the social, cultural, political, pedagogical, and infrastructural substrata that feed into the music-making practices of a city. This research provides new theory for what are being described as ‘music cities’. Through qualitative analysis and my lived experience as a musician and music producer, I examine how various factors ultimately inform what I term the undersong of a music city.
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Molodij, Anna. "City scoop." Thesis, KTH, Arkitektur, 2020. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:kth:diva-280655.

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This project is speculation in search of possibilities and rethinking the potential of Gamla Stan. Society is continually changing, as are the cities that we live in. The old town is mainly a residential area, but also a “living, pedestrian-friendly museum”. This is a place out of time and frozen in its form, a certain sensitivity is required when thinking about such a fragile context. However, the urban structure is not a fixed entity, but a dynamic and evolving one. By gentle carving in the existing city fabric, the aim is to re-introduce a workshop space in a contemporary manner. The idea is tested on the block of Cassiopea, where its building components get interconnected to make a continuous interior. The new space is about forgetting about the hyper-productivity mindset, with an intention to promote aesthetic pleasure and a slow pace of life. This collective and multifunctional space is a representation of artistic expression, a city atelier for making craft using technology. A space for artists, makers, and education, visible to the public.
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Corbett, David. "Exploring the potential of technology in enabling the inclusive co-production of space." Master's thesis, University of Cape Town, 2016. http://hdl.handle.net/11427/22727.

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The potential of emerging technology to address poly-urban issues is a growing focus on the agendas of cities worldwide. However, there is a lack of consensus regarding how and in whose interests it should be applied - should the aim be to establish 'smart cities' or to encourage 'smart citizens'? The 'bottom-up' approach advocates the latter and recognises the potential of technology to facilitate the prioritisation of issues and co-production of spaces. Particularly in a developing context where resources are severely limited, the ability to prioritise interventions to have maximum impact is exciting. However, these projects and the processes which enable them are under-researched. In this dissertation, a combination of Network Action Research and case study methods are used to guide the application of a selection of digital tools in combination with semi-structured and indepth interviews, surveys, and focus groups to a specific context. The products of this are insights regarding the processes which enable inclusive bottom-up smart city projects; the application of the Network Action Research method; and a context-specific resource of information to guide the future prioritisation of projects and planning in the study area. This dissertation explores the value of inclusive participation in planning, and the role that technology can play in facilitating this. However, it also uncovers the complex and non-linear nature of these projects, ultimately arguing that although technology is a valuable resource, it is not a catch-all. A hybridised approach to bottom-up smart city projects is crucial to their success.
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Books on the topic "City and production"

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British Columbia. Dept. of Agriculture., ed. City and suburban food production, 1918. Victoria, B.C: W.H. Cullin, 1997.

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Lyon, la production de la ville. Marseille: Parenthèses, 2009.

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Benabou, Roland. Workings of a city: Location, education, and production. Cambridge, Mass: Dept. of Economics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1991.

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Building globalization: Transnational architecture production in urban China. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2011.

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São Paulo: Perspectives on the city and cultural production. Gainesville: University Press of Florida, 2011.

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Foster, David William. Buenos Aires: Perspectives on the city and cultural production. Gainesville: University Press of Florida, 1998.

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Remanufacturing Seminar (1993 Oklahoma City, Okla.). Remanufacturing Seminar proceedings, May 24-26, 1993, Oklahoma City, OK: Real solutions from real people. Falls Church, VA: APICS, 1993.

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Gottdiener, Mark. Las Vegas: The social production of an all-American city. Malden, Mass: Blackwell, 1999.

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Ward, Peter M. Mexico City: The production and reproduction of an urban environment. London: Belhaven, 1990.

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Ward, Peter M. Mexico City: The production and reproduction of an urban environment. Boston, Mass: G.K. Hall, 1990.

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Book chapters on the topic "City and production"

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Höjer, Mattias, Anders Gullberg, and Ronny Pettersson. "Production." In Images of the Future City, 241–51. Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-007-0653-8_16.

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Graham, Gary, Jag Srai, Patrick Hennelly, and Roy Meriton. "The Smart City Production System." In Smart Cities, 755–71. Hoboken, NJ, USA: John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/9781119226444.ch26.

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Hatuka, Tali, and Eran Ben-Joseph. "Between Production and City Development." In New Industrial Urbanism, 39–57. New York: Routledge, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780367855000-3.

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Mitchel, Maurice, and Bo Tang. "The Remoteness of Mass Production and Planning." In Loose Fit City, 57–85. Mitchell and Bo Tang.Description: New York, NY : Routledge, 2018. 1 Includes bibliographical: Routledge, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.9774/gleaf.9781315523576_4.

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Mauro, Salvatore Engel-Di, and George Martin. "Cultivating the city for ecosocialism." In Urban Food Production for Ecosocialism, 196–221. London: Routledge, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003131281-8.

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Scott, Allen J. "Triumph and Tribulations of the Mass-Production Metropolisurbanization mass-production metropolis." In The Constitution of the City, 61–81. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-61228-7_4.

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Kehoe, Dennis. "Production in Rome." In A Companion to the City of Rome, 443–58. Chichester, UK: John Wiley & Sons, Ltd, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/9781118300664.ch21.

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Mauro, Salvatore Engel-Di, George Martin, and George Martin. "The city as ecosystem and environment." In Urban Food Production for Ecosocialism, 64–90. London: Routledge, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003131281-4.

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Busch, Malte. "Coventry at War: Industrial Relations, Ownership and Production." In Revival of a City, 41–65. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-22822-4_3.

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Mehta, Vikas. "Informality and the Production of Publicness in India." In Informality and the City, 407–19. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-99926-1_27.

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Conference papers on the topic "City and production"

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Roehr, D., and J. Laurenz. "Green living envelopes for food and energy production in cities." In SUSTAINABLE CITY 2008. Southampton, UK: WIT Press, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.2495/sc080621.

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Ibraheem, Fakhri H., Roza Muhsin Fathi Shaweas, and Safa Mustafa Shakir Mahmood. "Production of thermostone in Koya city." In First International Symposium on Urban Development. Southampton, UK: WIT Press, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.2495/isud130211.

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Patrizi, N., F. Morandi, and F. M. Pulselli. "Emergy evaluation and Life Cycle Assessment of a second generation bioethanol production." In SUSTAINABLE CITY 2014. Southampton, UK: WIT Press, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.2495/sc140892.

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KIET, TRUONG HONG VO TUAN, PHAM THI NGUYEN, and NGUYEN THI KIM THOA. "POTENTIAL THREATS OF PERI-URBAN TUONG-MANGO PRODUCTION AND POLICY IMPLICATIONS FOR HEALTHY AGRICULTURE FOR HEALTHY ECOSYSTEMS." In SUSTAINABLE CITY 2021. Southampton UK: WIT Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.2495/sc210501.

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Ofori-Boateng, C., and K. T. Lee. "Sustainable utilization of oil palm fronds for cellulosic ethanol production: environmental life cycle assessment." In THE SUSTAINABLE CITY 2013. Southampton, UK: WIT Press, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.2495/sc130732.

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Heidenreich, R., L. Patzig, A. Ränger, and F. Gebler. "Improvement of gas cleaning in non-ferrous metal production by new filter techniques based on a nonwoven assembly." In SUSTAINABLE CITY 2014. Southampton, UK: WIT Press, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.2495/sc141312.

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Mabadeje, Ademide O., and Rouzbeh Ghanbarnezhad Moghanloo. "Uncertainty Analysis of Production Forecast in Permian Basin." In SPE Oklahoma City Oil and Gas Symposium. Society of Petroleum Engineers, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.2118/195231-ms.

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LATEGAN, LOUIS G., and ELIZELLE J. CILLIERS. "CONSIDERING PLANNING APPROACHES IN THE GLOBAL SOUTH AND LEARNING FROM CO-PRODUCTION IN SOUTH AFRICA’S INFORMAL BACKYARD RENTAL SECTOR." In SUSTAINABLE CITY 2017. Southampton UK: WIT Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.2495/sc170211.

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Li, Tianhong, Zhaoquan Gao, Jianhui Fang, Peng Wang, and Jiangchuan Fan. "Grape Production Status and the Layout of Major Grape Production Regions in Beijing." In 2018 3rd International Conference on Smart City and Systems Engineering (ICSCSE). IEEE, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/icscse.2018.00186.

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DE LA FUENTE ARANA, ANDER, URTZI LLANO-CASTRESANA, and PAULA DURÁN CHAÍN. "CULTURAL LANDSCAPE HERITAGE AND THE CONSTRUCTION OF SOCIAL IDENTITY IN THE PRODUCTION AND COMMERCIALIZATION OF WINE IN THE RIBERA DEL RÍO, URUGUAY." In SUSTAINABLE CITY 2019. Southampton UK: WIT Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.2495/sc190441.

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Reports on the topic "City and production"

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Benabou, Roland. Workings of a City: Location, Education, and Production. Cambridge, MA: National Bureau of Economic Research, October 1991. http://dx.doi.org/10.3386/t0113.

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Grossman, Michael, and Theodore Joyce. Unobservables, Pregnancy Resolutions, and Birthweight Production Functions in New York City. Cambridge, MA: National Bureau of Economic Research, October 1988. http://dx.doi.org/10.3386/w2746.

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Ryan, Mark David, Greg Hearn, Marion McCutcheon, Stuart Cunningham, and Katherine Kirkwood. Australian Cultural and Creative Activity: A Population and Hotspot Analysis: Busselton. Queensland University of Technology, January 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.5204/rep.eprints.207597.

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Located a two-and-a-half hour drive south of Perth, Busselton is one of the largest and fastest growing regional centres in WA, a lifestyle services hub and the gateway to the internationally renowned wine region and popular tourist destination of Margaret River. Promoted by the City of Busselton council as the ‘Events Capital of WA’, Busselton has a strong festival and events economy that fuels local creative and arts production, supported by demographic shifts and population growth that is resulting in more creatives living and working in the city.
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Tucker, Dan, Hayley MacGregor, Ayako Ebata, and Ngo Thi Hoa. Pig Meat and Food Safety in Myanmar: Evidence to Support Practice. Myanmar Pig Partnership, November 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.19088/ids.2022.061.

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Research findings reveal that disease-causing bacteria, including Salmonella, are widespread on pig farms of all sizes in Yangon Region, Myanmar, as well as in pig meat sold to consumers in the city and rural areas. This evidence provides a snapshot of how intensification in pig production can affect food safety – and points to potential responses.
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McIntyre, Phillip, Susan Kerrigan, and Marion McCutcheon. Australian Cultural and Creative Activity: A Population and Hotspot Analysis: Marrickville. Queensland University of Technology, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.5204/rep.eprints.208593.

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Marrickville is located in the western heart of inner-city Sydney and is the beneficiary of the centrifugal process that has forced many creatives out of the inner city itself and further out into more affordable suburbs. This locality is built on the lands of the Eora nation. It is one of the most culturally diverse communities in the country but is slowly being gentrified creating tensions between its light industrial heart, its creative industry community and inner city developers. SME’s, co-working spaces and live music venues, are all in jeopardy as they occupy light-industrial warehouses which either have been re-zoned or are under threat of re-zoning. Its location underneath the flight path of major air traffic may indeed be a saving factor in its preservation as the creative industries operate across all major sectors here and the air traffic noise keeps land prices down. Despite these pressures the creative industries in Marrickville have experienced substantial growth since 2011, with the current CI intensity sitting at 9.2%. This is the only region in this study where the cultural production sector holds more than half the employment for specialists and support workers, when compared to creative services.
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May, Julian, Imogen Bellwood-Howard, Lídia Cabral, Dominic Glover, Claudia Job Schmitt, Márcio Mattos de Mendonça, and Sérgio Sauer. Connecting Food Inequities Through Relational Territories. Institute of Development Studies, December 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.19088/ids.2022.087.

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This paper explores how food inequities manifest at a territorial level, and how food territories are experienced, understood, and navigated by stakeholders to address those inequities. We interpret ‘food territory’ as a relational and transcalar concept, connected through geography, culture, history, and governance. We develop our exploration through four empirical cases: (i) the Cerrado, a disputed Brazilian territory that has been framed and reframed as a place for industrial production of global commodities, to the detriment of local communities and nature; (ii) urban agroecology networks seeking space and recognition to enable food production in the city of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil; (iii) informal food networks forming a complex web of intersecting local and global supply chains in Worcester, a secondary South African city; and (iv) periodic food markets in Ghana that synchronise trade systems across space and time to provide limited profit-making opportunities, but nonetheless accessible livelihood options, for poorer people. Examining these four cases, we identify commonalities and differences between them, in terms of the nature of their inequities and how different territories are connected on wider scales. We discuss how territories are perceived and experienced differently by different people and groups. We argue that a territorial perspective offers more than a useful lens to map how food inequities are experienced and interconnected; it also offers a tool for action.
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Trapani, Paola. Collaborative Housing as a Response to the Housing Crisis in Auckland. Unitec ePress, July 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.34074/ocds.0821.

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According to future projections based on current demographic growth trends, Auckland’s population will reach two million in 2033. Since the city is already afflicted by a serious housing crisis, at the beginning of 2017 the newly elected Mayor Phil Goff set up a task force. Formed by representatives of various stakeholders, it was given the task of producing a report with strategic and tactical guidelines to mitigate the situation. Unitec researchers were invited to respond to the report, which came out at the end of 2017, in the form of three think pieces towards the Building Better Homes, Towns and Cities National Science Challenge. This paper is a new iteration of one of these think pieces, focused on collaborative living, and expands on the new role that designers should play in this field. Its ideological position is that the house cannot and should not be considered as a commodity on the free market; nor should focus solely be on bringing down prices by increasing the number of houses on offer. Over time, housing might evolve to being more about social (use) value than exchange value. Other models of the production and consumption of household goods are documented throughout the world as alternatives to mainstream market logic, using collective procurement mechanisms to cut construction and marketing costs with savings of up to 30%. These experiments, not limited to achieving financially sustainable outcomes, are linked to new social practices of collaboration between neighbours. The sharing of spaces and equipment to complement private housing units also leads to social and environmental sustainability.
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Babiker, Mustafa, Amir Bazaz, Paolo Bertoldi, Felix Creutzig, Heleen De Coninck, Kiane De Kleijne, Shobhakar Dhakal, et al. What the Latest Science on Climate Change Mitigation means for Cities and Urban Areas. Indian Institute for Human Settlements, October 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.24943/supsv310.2022.

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The Summary for Urban Policymakers (SUP) initiative provides a distillation of the IPCC reports into accessible and targeted summaries that can help inform action at city and regional scales. Volume I in the series, What the Latest Physical Science of Climate Change Means for Cities, identified the ways in which human-induced climate change is affecting every region of the world, and the cities and urban areas therein. Volume II, Climate Change in Cities and Urban Areas: Impacts, Adaptation and Vulnerability, assessed the feasibility and effectiveness of different adaptation options. To achieve climate resilient development, synergies between policies and actions for climate change adaptation, mitigation and other development goals are needed. This third volume in the series, What the Latest Science on Climate Change Mitigation Means For Cities and Urban Areas offers a concise and accessible distillation of the IPCC Working Group III Report for urban policymakers. The 21st century is characterized by a rapidly growing urban population, urban land expansion and associated rise in demand for resources, infrastructure and services. These trends are expected to drive the growth in emissions from urban consumption and production through 2100, although the rate of urban emissions growth will depend on the type of urbanisation and the speed and scale of mitigation action implemented. Aggressive and ambitious policies for transition towards net zero greenhouse gas emissions can be implemented in cities and urban areas, while contributing to sustainable development. Ultimately, mitigation action and adaptation are interdependent processes, and pursuing these actions together can promote sustainable development.
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Sohane, Nidhi, Ruchika Lall, Ashwatha Chandran, Rasha Hasan Lala, Namrata Kapoor, and Harshal Deepak Gajjar. Home as Workplace: A Spatial Reading of Work-Homes. Indian Institute for Human Settlements, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.24943/hwsrwh10.2021.

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When home serves as workplace, the interface of domestic and productive spheres has spatial and social effects on various users of the space, scaling at times to the neighbourhood and the city. This study looks at all the ways in which home aids work — spatially and infrastructurally — and illustrates the role of various factors and actors in engaging with and shaping the work-home boundary. Work-homes in the Global South often engage transversally with formal planning. Users of work-homes exercise their agency in complex ways to maneuver the work-home boundary, often making post-facto modifications to the work-home. The study collates a repository of spatial and temporal innovation strategies devised by users to balance domestic and productive spheres in their homes, as a site to derive lessons for planning, housing policy and architecture. It investigates the role of the state in spatially enabling or limiting work-homes, and using the Indian context as an illustrative example, suggests enabling frameworks in planning that address the spatial particularities of work-homes
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Cunningham, Stuart, Marion McCutcheon, Greg Hearn, Mark Ryan, and Christy Collis. Australian Cultural and Creative Activity: A Population and Hotspot Analysis: Sunshine Coast. Queensland University of Technology, December 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.5204/rep.eprints.136822.

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The Sunshine Coast (unless otherwise specified, Sunshine Coast refers to the region which includes both Sunshine Coast and Noosa council areas) is a classic regional hotspot. In many respects, the Sunshine Coast has assets that make it the “Goldilocks” of Queensland hotspots: “the agility of the region and our collaborative nature is facilitated by the fact that we're not too big, not too small - 330,000 people” (Paddenburg, 2019); “We are in that perfect little bubble of just right of about everything” (Erbacher 2019). The Sunshine Coast has one of the fastest-growing economies in Australia. Its population is booming and its local governments are working together to establish world-class communications, transport and health infrastructure, while maintaining the integrity of the region’s much-lauded environment and lifestyle. As a result, the Sunshine Coast Council is regarded as a pioneer on smart city initiatives, while Noosa Shire Council has built a reputation for prioritising sustainable development. The region’s creative economy is growing at a faster rate that of the rest of the economy—in terms of job growth, earnings, incomes and business registrations. These gains, however, are not spread uniformly. Creative Services (that is, the advertising and marketing, architecture and design, and software and digital content sectors) are flourishing, while Cultural Production (music and performing arts, publishing and visual arts) is variable, with visual and performing arts growing while film, television and radio and publishing have low or no growth. The spirit of entrepreneurialism amongst many creatives in the Sunshine Coast was similar to what we witnessed in other hotspots: a spirit of not necessarily relying on institutions, seeking out alternative income sources, and leveraging networks. How public agencies can better harness that energy and entrepreneurialism could be a focus for ongoing strategy. There does seem to be a lower level of arts and culture funding going into the Sunshine Coast from governments than its population base and cultural and creative energy might suggest. Federal and state arts funding programs are under-delivering to the Sunshine Coast.
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