Not exact matches
Baltimore suffered another loss in
population last year as more than 5,300 people left the
city, continuing a downward
trend that accelerated after the 2015 unrest and ensuing spike in crime.
That people were essentially a problem, even a pollutant, rather than a resource; that social, political, economic, and ecological catastrophe was right around the corner, unless drastic steps were taken to stabilize and then reverse world
population trends - these were the themes, familiar to even the most casual student of the American anti-natalist lobby, that set the agenda for Budapest and Mexico
City.
This project has made me very conscious that, if you're going to talk about what L.A. means as a food
city, you're talking about a
city that's setting a national
trend for the multi-racial future of the United States, where there is no majority white
population.
Construction cranes, the Buffalo Billion and political pronouncements of rebirth haven't yet reversed one troubling
trend: The
city is still losing
population — albeit slowly, according to new US Census estimates.
Barring a change in
trends, this will be the
city's seventh consecutive decade of
population loss; it will have less than twice Amherst's
population by 2018.
In 2006, the
city released a detailed report on the
population trends in the
city which said that the Bronx's
population «which stood at 18.4 percent in 1950 and 16.6 percent in 2000, is projected to decline further to 16 percent in 2030.»
«Our
population is growing and we are adding jobs faster than other parts of the
City,» she stated, addressing the crowd of young Democrats, which ranged in ages from 21 - 36, «in order take advantage of these
trends and maximize outcomes for those who have been left behind for far too long, we will need to engage you and uplift your voices.»
Ms. Belbin and her colleagues are investigating a variety of questions related to migration into New York
City,
population transitions among its ethnic enclaves, and effects of historical events and
trends on recent generations as well as during the last few centuries.
More than half the world
population now lives in
cities, many migrating to urban centers from rural hinterlands, a
trend that shows no sign of abating.
However I did look at what would happen after that in relative, rather than absolute time, by featuring not only changes in geography, but in chapter by chapter fashion looking at
trends in human
population, agriculture, coastal
city infrastructure (all those buried wires!)
It coincides with the recovering economy, an increase in donations of clothing and household goods to charity, and a
trend toward downsizing as U.S.
population growth shifts from the suburbs to
city centers in many areas.»
They examine major
population trends, such as the growth of suburbs, the shrinking of
cities, and the explosion of the sun belt states.
And a quick search on Google for any
city will turn up some great detailed
population, immigration and employment
trends that are key when determining if you are in an area that is appreciating or will appreciate shortly.
As more and more
cities grow and reach a level of what I would call «UHI saturation», the slow growth of big
cities and smaller in absolute values UHI increase for
cities from a certain size explains a smaller delta UHI for an urban group that contains
cities, in comparison with a UHI contaminated average containing many small locations growing — consistent with the results from the BEST study — divergence appearing in the 1950s — and with the logarithmic dependency of UHI growing
trend based on
population.
And that effort meant people moving to the
cities — a
trend which began just about the time the LIA was ending and the Industrial Revolution began, when the world
population was 1 - 1.2 billion [About.com], vs today's 6.5 billion.
Between 1940 and 1970, the
city experienced an era of large
population growth although since that time this
trend has reversed itself.
Speaking at the Press Club of Baton Rouge, Donelon echoed the findings of recent reports that showed this is due in large part to a higher likelihood for Louisiana drivers to sue following an accident, a
trend the commissioner tied to the actions of poorer
populations in the state's two largest
cities.
Powerful
trends are pushing the global community to develop more smart
cities and invest in connected technologies, as the world
population increases and more people move to urban environments.
has been an obvious
trend that the
population in general and parents in particular leave the countryside to bigger
cities or more developed countries for employment opportunities.
In Vietnam, it has been an obvious
trend that the
population in general and parents in particular leave the countryside to bigger
cities or more developed countries for employment opportunities.
Since then, the
city of Birmingham, Al has seen an upward
trend in terms of its
population growth.
As a result, while we're still seeing signs of an urban comeback in real estate prices, corporate relocation decisions and even
population trends in some older
cities with lots of housing stock, most of the
population growth in the U.S. is again happening on the fringes of fast - growing metro areas in the South and West.
The Best
Cities for Middle - Class Families Index by the Chapman Center for Demographics and Policy looked at housing affordability, employment
trends, migration patterns, income growth, and how long it takes to commute in U.S. metropolitan areas with a
population more than 500,000 and determined that many of the top areas for middle - class families are midsize.
Unlike most
population trends, which tend to favor the West and South, multiple examples of primary
cities growing faster than suburbs can be found in all regions, including metros in the East like Boston - Cambridge - Quincy, Mass. / NH.