Multilevel comparison of large urban systems
Denise Pumain, Elfie Swerts, Cl\'ementine Cottineau, C\'eline, Vacchiani-Marcuzzo, Antonio Ignazzi, Anne Bretagnolle, Fran\c{c}ois Delisle,, Robin Cura, Liliane Lizzi, Sol\`ene Baffi

TL;DR
This paper compares large urban systems across seven major regions using standardized data, revealing common evolutionary patterns and trajectories that inform urban modeling and future population projections.
Contribution
It introduces a standardized comparative framework for large urban systems across diverse regions and analyzes their macro and micro-level growth patterns.
Findings
Hierarchical structures are similar across BRICS, Europe, and US.
Urban growth follows models consistent with evolutionary theories.
Micro-level trajectories reveal common principles and regional patterns.
Abstract
For the first time the systems of cities in seven countries or regions among the largest in the world (China, India, Brazil, Europe, the Former Soviet Union (FSU), the United States and South Africa) are made comparable through the building of spatio-temporal standardised statistical databases. We first explain the concept of a generic evolutionary urban unit ("city") and its necessary adaptations to the information provided by each national statistical system. Second, the hierarchical structure and the urban growth process are compared at macro-scale for the seven countries with reference to Zipf's and Gibrat's model: in agreement with an evolutionary theory of urban systems, large similarities shape the hierarchical structure and growth processes in BRICS countries as well as in Europe and United States, despite their positions at different stages in the urban transition that explain…
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