首页
登录
职称英语
(1) The urban population in 2014 accounted for 54% of the total global popul
(1) The urban population in 2014 accounted for 54% of the total global popul
游客
2023-10-21
43
管理
问题
(1) The urban population in 2014 accounted for 54% of the total global population, up from 34% in 1960, and continues to grow. Africa now has a larger urban population than North America and has 25 of the world’s fastest growing large cities. Half of the world’s urban population now lives in Asia, which also has half of the world’s largest cities and fastest growing large cities. Every year the world’s urban population swells by about 75m people. That extraordinary growth—equivalent to adding eight Londons—is a wonderful thing. Cities throw people together, encouraging the exchange of ideas. The people who move there tend to grow richer, freer and more tolerant. What is rather less wonderful is the way in which many of the world’s fastest-growing cities are expanding.
(2) The trouble is not, as is often claimed, that cities in poor and middle-income countries are spreading like oil slicks. Most of them need to expand. Many poor cities are incredibly dense already: Dhaka, the capital of Bangladesh, is nine times as tightly packed as Paris, if you include their suburbs. And no Western city has ever added inhabitants as quickly as the poor and emerging-world champions are doing. African and Asian metropolises are bound to sprawl even if sensible pro-density reforms are passed, such as scrapping height restrictions on buildings.
(3) The real problem is that these metropolises are spreading in the wrong way. Frequently, small housing developments or even individual houses are plunked down wherever a builder can cut a deal with a farmer. In the huge, jumbled districts that result, far too little space is set aside for roads. Manhattan is 36% road (overall, almost half of that capitalist temple is public space). In some unplanned African suburbs as little as 5% of the land is road. Even middle-class districts often lack sewers and mains water. As for amenities like public parks, forget it. Suburbs can eventually be retrofitted with roads and sewers. But that will be horrifically complicated and expensive—too much so for poor countries. It would be vastly cheaper and better to do sprawl properly from the start.
(4) Urban and national officials should begin by admitting two things: their cities are going to become very much larger; and this growth will be too quick to be controlled by comprehensive urban plans. Officials in poor countries often spend many years drawing up detailed plans; by the time they are finished, the city has changed so much that their designs cannot possibly be implemented.
(5) It is wiser to keep things simple. At a minimum, work out where the main thoroughfares and parks will go as the city expands. Again, New York is a good model. In 1811, when the city was still confined to the southern tip of Manhattan, it planned for a sevenfold expansion and laid out a street grid. Acquiring rights of way for future roads and amenities can be both costly and politically difficult (though not nearly as much as waiting until it is too late). Almost all fast-growing cities are in countries where landholdings are small, and small farmers do not take kindly to being booted off their land. But a few countries have developed a promising technique known as land readjustment. Instead of evicting farmers in the path of a new road, officials offer to reorganize a whole district. Everybody loses some land, and the biggest winners—those closest to the new road—compensate those who fare less well. Japanese cities used this technique when they were growing quickly. Today the Indian state of Gujarat makes it work.
(6) Increasingly, the world’s fastest-growing cities will be African. And those are especially hard to corral. Many African countries persist with some form of collective land ownership, which is anathema to professional developers: why buy land that you cannot formally own? Until farmers are given full rights to their lands, including the ability to transfer legal title, cities are likely to grow in a messy way. Good planning and secure property rights make for a better kind of sprawl. (本文选自 The Economist) [br] Which of the following is the best title for the passage?
选项
A、The Urban Population
B、The Right Kind of City Expanding
C、The World’s Fastest-growing Cities
D、African and Asian Metropolises
答案
B
解析
主旨题。纵览全文,文章第一段统领全文。说明在世界范围内城市数量激增,规模不断扩大;在随后的段落中,作者谈到了这些城市扩张过程中出现的一些问题。由此可知,全文都是在探讨城市发展过程中规划的重要性,故B“正确的扩张方式”为答案。A、C和D均是文中出现过的具体内容,但并不是文章的主旨,故排除。
转载请注明原文地址:https://tihaiku.com/zcyy/3118606.html
相关试题推荐
GlobalShortageofFreshWaterManypeoplebelievethatfreshwaterisi
ShouldwesustaintheextensiveuseofEnglishasagloballanguage?Thisha
GlobalWarming1.Globalwarming■Amixof【T1】______andirregularclimatecha
GlobalWarming1.Globalwarming■Amixof【T1】______andirregularclimatecha
GlobalWarming1.Globalwarming■Amixof【T1】______andirregularclimatecha
GlobalWarming1.Globalwarming■Amixof【T1】______andirregularclimatecha
VideoGameAddiction1.Aglobalandseriousproblem■Addictionoccurmorelike
VideoGameAddiction1.Aglobalandseriousproblem■Addictionoccurmorelike
VideoGameAddiction1.Aglobalandseriousproblem■Addictionoccurmorelike
VideoGameAddiction1.Aglobalandseriousproblem■Addictionoccurmorelike
随机试题
Cross-CulturalCommunicationTipsforAmericansI.WhyAmericansneedcross-cult
Mostpeopletodaythinkofchocolateassomethingsweettoeatordrinkthat
[originaltext]M:Iwaslateagain.AndIwasseverelyblamedbymyboss.W:Tha
甲亢性心脏病心律失常最常见的是A.阵发性房颤 B.房性期前收缩 C.交界性期
除哪项外,均为腹痛的常见病因A.感受外邪 B.饮食所伤 C.情志失调 D.
患儿,6岁。因发热2天,伴呕吐、头痛来诊。查体:体温39.2℃,脉率130次/分
国外某研究机构针对网上购物行为进行调查,随机抽取2万名网络购物消费者,对其进行“
包装策略主要有( )。A.相似包装策略 B.差别包装策略 C.组合包装策略
关于政治自由,下列说法中哪些是正确的?()A.政治自由是指公民表达自己政治
(2014年真题)下列会计事项中,表明企业金融资产发生减值的客观证据有()。A
最新回复
(
0
)