About this course
Science of cities:
- City fundamentals
- Evolution of cities
- Cities, states and global networks
- Economic geography of cities
- Regional housing and labor markets
- Political science (governance) of cities
- Cities as complex adaptive systems
Urban trends:
- Socio-political trends: inequality, gentrification, precariat, city ownership, multi-level governance, urban health
- Economic trends: housing market dynamics, data-economy, overtourism, hyper connectivity
- Demographic trends: ageing, diversification and expulsion
- Technological trends: digital participation, AI, mobility, energy, pollution
- Environmental trends: overuse of resources, biodiversity and habitat decline, climate change and extreme weather
- Societal transitions: energy, food/agriculture, mobility, circular/regenerative economy, nature-based, health, social/governance
Diagnosis
- Framework for city diagnostics
- Problem definition and root cause analysis
Strategy making
- What is a strategy?
- History of urban strategy making
- Framework for city strategy
- Identifying a city’s values
- Foresight, visioning, futuring
- Goal setting and scoping the challenge
Transition science
- Multi-level perspective
- X-curve
- Transition/niche experiment, strategic niche management
- Identifying transition and critical paths and leverages
- Designing spatial and policy proposals
Presenting convincingly
- Pyramid Principle
- Golden Circle: why, how, what
- Turning information into a narrative
- Kill your darlings
Learning outcomes
After completing this course, students are able to:
Analyze major urban trends and societal transitions in relation to global socio-cultural, socio-technological, political-economic, geopolitical and ecological developments.
Holistically analyze (diagnose) a city at the level of the daily urban system, identifying key urban issues and their root causes, and contextualizing these within the city’s wider geographical and political economical context.
Formulate a sustainable long-term vision that challenges incumbent systems and practices and articulates a radically new future.
Methodically design transition pathways and strategies that guide urban systems toward desired long-term, systemic change.
Convincingly communicate their city diagnosis and proposed long-term strategy to decision makers.
Resources
- Lecture ppts, selected books (recommended chapters) and articles, links to videos and websites
Additional information
- More infoCourse page on website of Eindhoven University of Technology
- Contact a coordinator
- About studying within the EWUU alliancehttps://ewuu.nl/en/education/courses/eduxchange-faq-students
- Levelmaster
Starting dates
9 Nov 2026
ends 17 Jan 2027
Enrolment starts 15 Jun, 00:00Register between 15 Jun, 00:00 - 11 Oct
