Litcius/Paper detail

Mesoamerican urbanism: Indigenous institutions, infrastructure, and resilience

David M. Carballo, Gary M. Feinman, Aurelio López Corral

2022Urban Studies23 citationsDOI

Abstract

Mesoamerica was the most urbanised landscape of the precolonial Western Hemisphere, and urban dwellers there shared many cultural commonalities. They also varied significantly regarding what social institutions they emphasised, what forms of urban infrastructure they created, their fiscal financing and systems of governance, as well as how they managed ecological resources and risk. In this paper, we provide a comparative analysis of Mesoamerican cities using a database of archaeological indices of Indigenous urban characteristics. We report positive correlations between the longevity of cities in our sample and more collective institutions of governance, higher population densities, and more shared and equitably distributed forms of urban infrastructure. The study draws on Indigenous knowledge and practices to assist the target-based approach of the UN Sustainable Development Goals and New Urban Agenda and provides insights into how certain urban institutions and infrastructure can foster greater resilience and equity in the face of ecological and cultural-historical perturbations.

Topics & Concepts

IndigenousUrbanismCorporate governanceGeographyGreen infrastructureUrban resilienceEquity (law)Psychological resiliencePopulationEconomic growthEconomic geographyPolitical scienceUrban planningEnvironmental planningArchitectureSociologyEcologyBusinessEconomicsPsychologyPsychotherapistLawDemographyArchaeologyBiologyFinanceArchaeology and ancient environmental studies