World City Network: A Global Urban Analysis

Front Cover
Routledge, Jun 2, 2004 - Computers - 256 pages

With the advent of multinational corporations, the traditional urban service function has 'gone global'. In order to provide services to globalizing corporate clients, the offices of major financial and business service firms across the world have formed a network. It is the myriad of flows between office towers in different metropolitan centres that has produced a world city network.

Through an analysis of the intra-company flows of 100 leading global service firms across 315 cities, this book assesses cities in terms of their overall network connectivity, their connectivity by service sector, and their connectivity by world region.

Peter Taylor's unique and illuminating book provides the first comprehensive and systematic description and analysis of the world city network as the 'skeleton' upon which contemporary globalization has been built. His analyses challenge the traditional view of the world as a 'mosaic map' of political boundaries.

Written by one of the foremost authorities on the subject, this book provides a much needed mapping of the connecting relationships between world cities, and will be an enlightening book for students of urban studies, geography, sociology and planning.

 

Contents

Relations
7
Back to basics
31
Networks of cities
55
Geographies of connectivity
71
City network analyses
101
A mapping of services in globalization
129
Mappings of cities in globalization
149
a metageographical argument
179
reasserting cities?
194
Appendix A Global service firms the GaWC 100
215
Bibliography
221
Index
231
Copyright

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About the author (2004)

Peter Taylor is Professor of Geography at the University of Loughborough, UK and Research Professor at the Metropolitan Institute, Virginia Tech, USA.

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