Infrastructure inequality is a characteristic of urbanization.

Bhartendu Pandey, Christa Brelsford, Karen C Seto
Author Information
  1. Bhartendu Pandey: Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Princeton University, Princeton, NJ 08540. ORCID
  2. Christa Brelsford: Geospatial Science and Human Security Division, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Oak Ridge, TN 37831. ORCID
  3. Karen C Seto: Yale School of the Environment, Yale University, New Haven, CT 06511. ORCID

Abstract

Urbanization can challenge sustainable development if it produces unequal outcomes. Infrastructure is an important urbanization dimension, providing services to support diverse urban activities. However, it can lock in unequal outcomes due to its durable nature. This paper studies inequalities in infrastructure distributions to derive insights into the structure and characteristics of unequal outcomes associated with urbanization. We analyzed infrastructure inequalities in two emerging economies in the Global South: India and South Africa. We developed and applied an inequality measure to understand the structure of inequality in infrastructure provisioning (based on census data) and infrastructure availability (based on satellite nighttime lights [NTLs] data). Consistent with differences in economic inequality, results show greater inequalities in South Africa than in India and greater urban inequalities than rural inequalities. Nevertheless, inequalities in urban infrastructure provisioning and infrastructure availability increase from finer to coarser spatial scales. NTL-based inequality measurements additionally show that inequalities are more concentrated at coarse spatial scales in India than in South Africa. Finally, results show that urban inequalities in infrastructure provisioning covary with urbanization levels conceptualized as a multidimensional phenomenon, including demographic, economic, and infrastructural dimensions. Similarly, inequalities in urban infrastructure availability increase monotonically with infrastructure development levels and urban population size. Together, these findings underscore infrastructure inequalities as a feature of urbanization and suggest that understanding urban inequalities requires applying an inequality lens to urbanization.

Keywords

References

  1. IEEE Trans Pattern Anal Mach Intell. 2006 Nov;28(11):1768-83 [PMID: 17063682]
  2. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2017 Aug 22;114(34):8957-8962 [PMID: 28062692]
  3. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2007 Apr 24;104(17):7301-6 [PMID: 17438298]
  4. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2017 Aug 22;114(34):8963-8968 [PMID: 28461489]
  5. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2011 May 24;108(21):8589-94 [PMID: 21576474]
  6. J Reg Sci. 2010 Feb;50(1):515-540 [PMID: 25484452]
  7. Nature. 2018 Jan 18;553(7688):333-336 [PMID: 29320477]
  8. J R Soc Interface. 2021 Aug;18(181):20210223 [PMID: 34343453]
  9. Sci Adv. 2020 Aug 19;6(34):eaat8812 [PMID: 32875099]
  10. Am J Public Health. 1997 Sep;87(9):1491-8 [PMID: 9314802]
  11. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2017 Aug 22;114(34):8935-8938 [PMID: 28784798]
  12. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2019 May 14;116(20):9808-9813 [PMID: 31010922]
  13. Ambio. 2021 Apr;50(4):834-869 [PMID: 33715097]
  14. Appl Geogr. 2020 Apr;117:102188 [PMID: 32287517]
  15. Natl Sci Rev. 2016 Dec;3(4):470-494 [PMID: 32747868]
  16. Science. 2016 May 20;352(6288):940-3 [PMID: 27199418]

Word Cloud

Created with Highcharts 10.0.0inequalitiesinfrastructureurbanurbanizationinequalityunequaloutcomesIndiaSouthAfricaprovisioningavailabilityshowspatialcandevelopmentInfrastructurestructurebaseddataeconomicresultsgreaterincreasescaleslevelsUrbanizationchallengesustainableproducesimportantdimensionprovidingservicessupportdiverseactivitiesHoweverlockduedurablenaturepaperstudiesdistributionsderiveinsightscharacteristicsassociatedanalyzedtwoemergingeconomiesGlobalSouth:developedappliedmeasureunderstandcensussatellitenighttimelights[NTLs]ConsistentdifferencesruralNeverthelessfinercoarserNTL-basedmeasurementsadditionallyconcentratedcoarseFinallycovaryconceptualizedmultidimensionalphenomenonincludingdemographicinfrastructuraldimensionsSimilarlymonotonicallypopulationsizeTogetherfindingsunderscorefeaturesuggestunderstandingrequiresapplyinglenscharacteristicdevelopingcountriesscalesustainability

Similar Articles

Cited By