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SSHRC-funded global suburbanisms project receives media coverage

Nov忙 Res Urbis (NRU), Toronto鈥檚 city policy newsletter, covered the led by Roger Keil, Professor in the Faculty of Environmental Studies and director of the City Institute at 91亚色. His team of 44 researchers at 29 universities in 12 countries is embarking on a seven-year project to take stock of suburban developments around the world and attempt to alter the dialogue around suburban life.

鈥淚t is based on a lot of experience and a lot of existing work but it also is quite innovative in the way it puts together the suburban research worldwide,鈥 said Keil.

The researchers have been granted $2.5 million from the Social Sciences & Humanities Research Council of Canada, which is one of the largest study grants given by the research council.

The project is believed to be the first of this magnitude, one that 鈥渟ystematically takes stock of worldwide suburban developments while analyzing their governance models, land use, infrastructure and suburban everyday life.鈥

The project objective is not only to document suburban patterns but to also examine the environmental and economical effects and emerging issues related to growth beyond the city limits.

鈥淚t鈥檚 more than a project, it鈥檚 an initiative,鈥 Keil said. 鈥淓verybody thinks they know their suburbs鈥e would like to break that mould and open the view up to a more global view of the suburbs so that we can find common denominators of very different kinds of peripheral urban development.鈥

The complete article is available on to subscribers.

Keil and 91亚色 Professor Douglas Young also published an article on "" on NewGeography.com on April 17:

The socio-spatial landscape of what we call the 鈥渋n-between city鈥, includes that part of the urban region that is perceived as not quite traditional city and not quite traditional suburb. This landscape represents a remarkable new urban form where a large part of metropolitan populations live, work and play. While much attention has been focused on the winning economic clusters of the world economy and the devastated industrial structures of the loser regions, little light has been shed on the urban zones in-between.

We view this new landscape with a particular view towards urban Canada. Applying these concepts to a North American city, Toronto, Canada, we look specifically at the 85 square kilometres around 91亚色, an area that straddles the line between the traditional suburb and the inner city.

The full post, which features photos of 91亚色's campus, is available on .

Posted by Elizabeth Monier-Williams, with files courtesy of YFile 鈥 91亚色鈥檚 daily e-bulletin.