

First, they examined the effects of the global political economy on the growth and development of cities over time. Using the 12 sites as case studies, the researchers outlined several levels of investigation to assemble a picture of what global city regions look like and why.

The Lincoln Institute’s 1995 Cambridge Conference in September focused on these global forces. Those who focus on urban issues have been arguing for many years that we are seeing the emergence of a new kind of human settlement, with its own distinct social and economic structures and associated physical forms. Global investment, sophisticated communications, and widespread corporate and personal mobility are transforming city regions around the world.
