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Stages of Urban Growth
Component-I (A) - Personal Details
Component-I (B) - Description of Module
Items Description of Module
Subject Name Geography
Paper Name Urban Geography
Module Name/Title Process of urbanization in India: A colonial legacy
and the post-independence characteristics
Module Id UG-32
Pre-requisites
Objectives To understand the process of urbanization in India
from colonial period to recent past
Keywords Urbanization, India, Colonial period, Post-Independence period
Role Name Affiliation
Principal Investigator Prof. Masood Ahsan Siddiqui Department of Geography,
Jamia Millia Islamia,
New Delhi
Paper Coordinator, if
any
Dr. Deeksha Bajpai Department of Geography,
Jamia Millia Islamia,
New Delhi
Content Writer/Author
(CW)
Prof. Dipender Nath Das CSRD, JNU
Content Reviewer (CR) Dr. Deeksha Bajpai Department of Geography,
Jamia Millia Islamia,
New Delhi
Language Editor (LE)
Introduction:
The study of urban geography to a great extent is aimed at explaining the distribution of
towns and cities and the similarities and the dissimilarities that exist between and within
them (Pacione, 2009). However, if Heraclitus of Ephesos is to be believed, the only
thing that endures and is constant in life is change, yet there ought to be some sort of
conformity in the character of the urban spaces. The cities contain inherent characters
unique to each of them but have in common features like commercial and residential
areas, transport network, infrastructure, range of service provided to the residents to
name a few. The only difference is that all these features vary in terms of degree and
their operability across space.
It is a well noted fact that global urbanization is a recent phenomenon and started
mainly in the Western countries of USA and UK and the beginning of the last century in
these countries had close to a quarter of their population living in their urban areas as
compared to the meager 2 to 3 per cent in the developing nations of the world. Ever
since all the countries across the world are experiencing growth of urban population in
terms of absolute numbers and proportion, phenomenon christened as urban growth
and urbanization respectively. However, it is quite true that the experiences of the
individual towns and cities have varied to a great extent in terms of their growth
characteristics and has had a close linkage with the prevalent social and economic state
of affairs. The urban growth of towns may be addressed from two broad perspectives as
follows:
a. A macro-level perspective hinting at the growth of urban population at the global
level throwing light on how the urban population have grown over time across the
global cities and how the phenomenon of urbanization has occurred in them.
b. A micro-level perspective looks at the individual experiences of towns and cities
passing through sequential stages of growth and how such growth is
encountered by the differential movement of the population in different zones.
A clear idea of the stages of urban growth requires a systematic revelation of the
macro-level perspective and gradually transcending to the micro-level perspective of
growth experiences of individual towns and cities.
Urban Growth from a macro-lens: Perspectives of the Globe and India
It is a well established fact that what is urban today was constituted by a handful
population in the initial years of the19th century. However, over the past centuries, the
world that had been dominantly rural was getting transformed into an urban space and
the situation may be illustrated well through the following table 1.
Table 1: Urban Population Distribution Across The Globe, 1970, 1994
Region 1970 1994
Population in million
Percentage of urban population
Population in million
Percentage of urban population
More Developed Region 677 67.5 868 74.7
Australia-New Zealand 13 84.4 18 84.9
Europe 423 64.4 532 73.3
Japan 74 71.2 97 77.5
North America 167 73.8 221 76.1
Less Developed Region 676 25.1 1653 37.0
Africa 84 23.0 240 33.4
Asia* 428 21.0 1062 32.4
Latin America 163 57.4 249 73.7
Oceania* 1 18.0 2 24.0
*Note- Asia excludes Japan and Oceania excludes Australia and New Zealand Source: United Nations (1995). World Urbanisation Prospects: 1994 Revision. New York, United Nations.
Quite evident from the above table is the fact that the increase in urban population has
been a global phenomenon as both the more developed world and less developed
world has experienced a growth throughout the twentieth century and continues to do
the same in the present one. It is clear that there is a distinct numeric divide when it
comes to the volume of urban population in the developed and the developing world
where the former has lesser numbers than the latter. But when it comes to the
percentage of urban population, the former reports to have higher proportion of
population in their urban counterparts than the latter. The less developed region reports
to have around 37 per cent of their population in the urban regions as compared to
close to two-third of population in the more developed region. Countries of Europe,
Australia, Japan and North America have more than 70 per cent of their population in
the urban areas compared to a little more than one third in the developing regions of
Africa, Asia, Latin America and Oceania.
The story of urban growth and the stimulating factors of such growth have been a quite
different experience for the developing countries and the developed ones. India being
one of the much talked of countries in the developing world, would make the exploration
of its urban growth over time an interesting exercise. For the ease of reference the four
top urban agglomerations of India namely Mumbai, Delhi, Chennai and Kolkata have
been considered and their growths have been traced from 1901 to the recent most
census of 2011. This would in turn help to develop a clear understanding of how the
major urban centres in India grew over time. The situation is illustrated in the table 2.
Table 2:
Population in the Four Major Metros of India between 1901 and 2011.
YEAR DISTRIBUTION OF POPULATION (In Million) IN THE TOP FOUR URBAN AGGLOMERATES OF INDIA
MUMBAI DELHI CHENNAI KOLKATA
1901 0.8 0.2 0.5 1.5
1911 1.0 0.2 0.6 1.7
1921 1.3 0.3 0.6 1.8
1931 1.3 0.4 0.7 2.1
1941 1.7 0.7 0.9 3.6
1951 3.2 1.4 1.5 4.7
1961 4.5 2.4 1.9 5.7
1971 6.6 3.6 3.1 7.4
1981 9.4 5.8 4.2 9.2
1991 12.6 8.5 5.3 11.0
2001 16.4 12.9 6.6 13.2
2011 18.4 16.3 8.6 14.1
Source: Census of India, 2001 and 2011
The table (2) contains the population of the major urban agglomerated of Mumbai,
Delhi, Chennai and Kolkata and it is revealed that all the four metros have experienced
a growth in urban population in the last century. It is clear that Kolkata Urban
Agglomeration (KUA) was the only urban agglomerate having more than a million
population in the beginning of the twentieth century and continued to grow ever since.
Mumbai joined the million plus league of cities in 1911 and continues to experience
staggering growth at a pace which overpowered all the other major three agglomerates
of the country. It presently houses the highest number of urban population of 18.4
million followed closely by Delhi (16.3 million), Kolkata (14.1 million) and Chennai (8.6
million) (Census, 2001, 2011). However, if the growth rates are taken into account,
Delhi and Mumbai far supersede the remaining two urban agglomerates in the years of
reference between 1901 and 2011.
Urban Growth from a micro-lens:
Having noted the growth of urban population at the global level, what is essential is to
note the changes that come along with urban growth in the morphology and the
nomenclature of urban spaces. It is evident that cities and towns acting as nodes of
urban growth take different forms in accommodating the ever increasing urban
population. Different agencies across the world have christened urban spaces on the
basis of several selected criteria. The following section will throw light on some of the
terminologies that are frequently used when the urban spaces are talked of. The
Directorate of Census Operations, India, 2001 has defined the term “urban area” or
“town” on the basis of the following criteria (Bhusan 2010):
(i) All places with a municipality, corporation, cantonment board or notified town
area, etc.
(ii) All other places that satisfy the following criteria :
a. Minimum population of 5000.
b. At least 75 % of its male working population engaged in non- agricultural
activities and
c. A density of population of at least 400 persons per square kilometer or
1000 per square mile.
Though the basic criterion for the christening of settlement as towns have
remained fixed, yet certain alterations have been made by the Directorate of the Census
Operations in India from time to time since the very inception. However, a synoptic
overview of the basic criteria may be provided in the following table 3.
TABLE 3: CRITERIA BY THE CENSUS OF INDIA TO BE SELECTED AS TOWN (1891-2001).
CRITERIA 01 91 81 71 61 51 41 31 21 11 1901 1891
Municipal Corporation * * * * * * * * * * * *
Minicipal Area * * * * * * * * * * * *
Town Committee * * * * * * ** ** ** ** ** **
Notified Area * * * * * ** ** ** ** ** ** **
Cantonment board * * * * * * * * * * * *
POPULATION DENSITY OF 400 persons/sq.Km. or 1000 persons/sq.mile.
* * * * * ** ** ** ** ** ** **
Minimum 5000 people * * * * * ** ** ** ** ** ** **
75 per cent of male population in non-agricultural activities
* * * * * ** ** ** ** ** ** **
All civil lines not included in the municipal limits
** ** ** ** ** ** * * * * * **
Source: Directorate of Census Operations, India, 2001, Series-A. **Definition of towns does not abide by the criterion. * Definition of towns abides by the criterion.
Apart from the above stated criteria, certain modifications have been made in
different years by the Directorate of Census Operations which may be summed up as
follows:
1. Any continuous collection of houses inhabited by not less than 500 persons
which according to the Directorate of Census Operations of the Superintendent
of the state possessed pronounced urban characteristics and amenities could be
defined as towns. The criteria were followed in all the census years between
1891 and 1971. However, in making the decision certain considerations were to
be kept in mind as
a. The character of population,
b. Relative density of the dwelling,
c. Importance of trade and historic association in order to avoid treating the
overgrown villages as towns. However, in case of trade as a criterion, the
proportion of trading or industrial population to the total population had to
be equal or more than that of the agricultural population.
2. However, the tests prescribed for distinguishing the towns from the villages in
the different states of India were based on the ideas common to all of them but
were not applied with meticulous uniformity. In case of the Princely states, the
definition of the towns was applied little indiscriminately.
Certain terminologies come into frequent usage when urban studies are taken up.
They may be highlighted in the following discussion.
City has been defined as any town with population of 1,00,000 at the same time
satisfying the other administrative, demographic and economic criteria as mentioned
above.
On the other hand, a metropolis or million city has been defined as an urban
area having a population of 1 million and above with a cosmopolitan character and
administered by one or more municipal corporations or local bodies.
Much customarily found in any literature regarding the urban study is the term urban
agglomeration which has been defined as a continuous spread constituting a town and
its adjoining urban outgrowths (OG’s) or two or more physically contiguous towns along
with any OG if present. In some cases railway colonies, university campuses, port areas
etc. may come up near a city or a statutory town outside its statutory limits but well
within the revenue limit of a village or villages contiguous to the town or city. Each
individual area by itself may not satisfy the minimum population criteria to qualify to be
treated as an individual urban unit but may deserve to be clubbed with the town as a
continuous urban spread.
For the delineation of urban agglomeration during Census 2001, the following criteria
were taken as prerequisite:
i. A core town or at least one of the constituent towns of an urban agglomeration
should necessarily be a statutory town.
ii. The total population of all the constituent towns an out growth’s of an urban
agglomeration should not be less than 20,000. With these two basic criteria
having met, the following are the possible situations in which urban
agglomeration would be constituted:
a. A city or town with one or more contiguous out growths.
b. Two or more adjoining towns with their out growths and
c. A city with one or more adjoining towns with their out growths all of
which form a continuous spread
Central business district is the focus of intra-city transport routes having the maximum
overall accessibility to the most parts of the urban area. It is characterized by peak land
values and intense development with high densities. The development is usually more
vertically than horizontally (ENVIS, SPA, 2008).
The term Urban sprawl in the way it is presently been used was coined by Earle
Draper one of the first city planners in the south-east USA. It refers to the tendency
towards lower city density as the city foot prints expand (Nechyba and Walsh, 2004).
The urban sprawl can take different forms as low density residential developments or so
called edge cities that give rise to business activity like office buildings, retail and even
manufacturing that can take the form of planned communities.
The concept of Standard Urban Area (SUA), was developed with the intention of
coverage of larger core towns or cities as well as its adjoining areas which might also be
rural areas coming under the influence of the core towns (Roy, 1991).
Urban Primacy was formally recognized by Jefferson (1939) which denotes a condition
where the largest city in a country is super ordinate in both sizes and national influence
in comparison to the others. Scholars in various studies have referred to the fact that
urbanization manifests itself in particular territories in urban primacy and thereby
generates regional imbalances.
Similar concepts have been proposed by United Nations to refer to urban centres of
various sizes. While megacities for instance are the cities with more than 8 million
population, metacities or hyper cities are the conurbations with more than 20 million
population. It is interesting to note that population in some of the hypercities is found to
be more than the population in some of the countries of the world. For example, Greater
Mumbai in India with a population of 12.4 million in 2011 is said to have their population
almost equivalent to the combined population of Norway (5.0 million) and Sweden (9.5
million) in 2011.
The scrutiny of the urban terminologies help in the identification of the characteristics of
the process of urbanization, its manifestations in different regions, its basic problems,
recent policy interventions and the related governmental schemes (Kundu et. al., 1999).
Stages of Urban Growth:
It may appear that urban centres have experienced a simplistic growth from being the
smallest to the largest though an inherent unidirectional process. But scholars over the
time have come up with different theories to track the growth of the urban nodes
through sequential stages. Theoretically several models have tried to explain the stages
of urban growth (Das and Bhusan, 2014). The classic structural change model of
Chenery and Syrquin (1979) identified characteristic features of the development
process, such as the shift from agricultural (primary) to industrial (secondary) production
and Northam (1979) identified characteristic phases of urbanization on the basis of
logistic patterns in urban growth. On the other hand, some models have even tried to
phase out urban growth on the basis of GDP per capita, industrial structure (the
proportion of the economy devoted to primary, secondary, or tertiary industry),
employment structure (the proportion of jobs associated with each industrial sector) and
level of urbanization (the proportion of non-farm population in cities) as indicators of the
stage of city development (Wang, Liu, Peng, Chen, Driskell, Zheng, 2011). However,
Berg, Drewett, Klassen, Rossi and Vijverberg in 1982 conceptualised the urban growth
in well sequenced stages and generated a model of urban growth on the basis of
population growth in the urban regions and the shifts in population between the core
and the peripheral zones. Population mostly focuses on the core for their economic
activities. Berg’s model proposed that the urban regions develop in well deciphered
stages of Urbanisation, Suburbanisation/Ex-urbanisation, Counter-urbanisation and Re-
urbanisation (Clarke, 2003).
Theories of interdependency, mercantilism and that of global urban development
have sought to propose a kind of causal between processes of wealth accumulation and
the creation of hierarchy of the urban spaces. These have further talked of urban
development as consequent upon the stages of economic development from
mercantilism through industrial and monopoly capitalism to corporate capitalism. In the
later stages of economic development the urban spaces at the macro level are open to
exchange of both human and social capital. However, if the same is thought at a much
smaller scale i.e. at a meso level, then such hierarchies are also found to exist within
urban regions of particular nation. In India for example, the urban population is found to
be concentrated in few of the major states and further if such individual states are
considered then a primacy is indicated in some of the major cities or urban
agglomerations in them (e.g., Kolkata UA accounts more than 48.4 percent of the total
urban population of West Bengal in 2011).
Klassen et.al (1981) and van den Breg (1982) have employed the concept of cyclic
urbanization wthin individual urban agglomerations and have identified four major
stages in which they grow. The stages may be summed up as
a. Urbanisation
b. Suburbanization or exurbanisation
c. Disurbanisation or counterurbanisation and
d. Reurbanisation
While in the stage of urbanization, certain settlement grow and expand at the cost of
their surrounding countryside, the suburbansiation or the exurbanisation phase
experiences the growth of the peripheral ones of urban settlements at a higher rate in
comparison to the core. In the stage of counter urbanization, the core experiences a
loss of urban population which far exceeds the rate of population gain at the peripheries
resulting in the overall loss of the urban settlement in terms of population numbers and
in the stage of reurbanisation, the core starts gaining population where as the ring
keeps on loosing population.
However, Breg’s model is based on the changes in the rate and direction of population
movement between the urban core and the peripheral ring which together form the daily
urban system (DUS) which together are functionally interrelated. Absolute change is
noted in the urban settlement in cases the core and the ring experience change in
population in two different directions and relative change is experienced when the
population moves in both the zones but at different rates but in the same direction.
The stages with their relative change in the direction of population have been summed
up in the following figure 1.
Figure 1:
Stages of Urban Development after van den Breg
Source: Pacione (2009)
Geyer and Kontuly (1993) postulated the phases of urban growth in their theory of
Generalised Stages of Differential Urbanisation. They identified that the cities grow
through the following stages of
a. The primate city phase
b. The intermediate city phase and
c. The small city phase
In the initial primate city phase, population growth and economic activities are
concentrated in the rapidly growing primate cities. The cities slowly attain their multi-
nodal character through the stages of early primate city, intermediate primate city phase
and advanced primate city phase.
On the other hand the intermediate city phase is characterized by the slowing down of
the growth rate of the primate city and spatial deconcentration. This phase experiences
the growth intermediate sized cities in close proximity to the primate city.
The small city phase on the other hand sees the growth of small urban centres which
grow at a much faster rate in comparison to the primate city and the intermediate cities.
Conclusion:
It therefore follows that cities are constantly changing in terms of their population
numbers and in comparison to the proportion staying in the rural counterparts. This
change in the cities’ morphology and size is mainly in response to the ongoing changes
in the social, economic and demographic scenario and different scholars have tried to
phase the cities growth in different characteristics stages. However, it would be
interesting to note that the cities mainly add the population through two main processes
of natural increase (with higher birth rate than death rate) and through migration. It may
be noted that the sequential phases of urban growth have been mainly proposed from
the western experience of urbanization and therefore may not be true for the developing
countries. However, if the stages of growth for the Indian cities are taken into account,
the phenomenon may not be explained by a single model or theory rather a combination
of a set of these.