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Essay / The impact of megacity problems on Bangkok - 860
Impact of the Western growth model on BangkokThe concentration of the world's population in urban territories is growing at an extremely rapid pace, and in this wonder, projections call for a much faster development of megacities, now characterized by the United Nations (UN) as urban communities of more than 10 million individuals (Parker, J. 2002). The meaning of what a megacity is is clear, as the population center that separates megacities from other urban areas changes with time and connection. In the ancient world, Rome, with more than a million inhabitants, was a megacity, and today London or Chicago could be considered megacities, although they fall under the 10 million limit of the UN. Here, the effect of the Western development model on the rising megacity of Bangkok will be seriously considered. The mix of high population, deprivation and limited assets makes the emerging megacity an environment that encourages the breeding of disease, from cholera to tuberculosis. to sexually transmitted contaminations which, in an era of rapid correspondence, can be almost immediately generated by whatever remains of the world. Helplessness in the face of terrorism, regular perils, environmental fiascos, war conditions and lack of food are also exacerbated in the megacities of the developing scene. As late scenes indicated, assaults on consulates, organizations, and explorers specifically influence the created world (Niath, I. 1998). Megacities, both in the created scene and in the creative scene, are places where social unrest regularly begins. Such distress influences all that remains of the world, as do other megacity phenomena, middle of paper...... megacity, speaking physically in neighborhoods and faceless, and speaking allegorically in the absence of sufficient reflection on needs has given rise to the development of a fundamentalism whose foundations are fundamentally monetary and which clearly highlights the impact of the Western model of development. References World Resources Institute. 1996. World resources, 1996-97. New York: Oxford University Press. Bugliarello, G. 2008. Technology and the city. 131-146 in Megacity Growth and the Future, RJ Fuchs, E. Brennan, J. Chamie, F. Lo, JI Uitto, eds. Tokyo: United Nations University Press. Parker, J. 2002. A Survey of Cities: Turn on the Lights – Many Splendid Things. The Economist 336(7925).Niath, I. 1998. Urbanization and some solutions. Paper presented at the Inter-Academy Forum meeting, United Nations Habitat II Conference, Istanbul, June.