Metropolitan areas o Mexico
Metropolitan auries in Mexico hae been tradeetionally defined as the group o municipalities that hivily interact wi ilk ither, uisually aroond a core ceety.[1] In 2004, a joint effort atween CONAPO, INEGI an the Meenistry o Social Development (SEDESOL) greeit tae define metropolitan auries as ane o the follaein:[1]
- the group o twa or mair municipalities, in which a ceety wi a population o at least 50,000 is locatit whose urban aurie extends ower the limit o the municipality that oreeginally contained the core ceety incorporatin either physically or, unner its aurie o direct influence, ither adjacent predominantly urban municipalities, aw o which either hae a heich degree o social an economic integration or are relevant for urban politics an admeenistration; or
- a single municipality, in which a ceety o a population o at least ane million is locatit an fully contained (that is, it does no transcend the limits o a single municipality); or
- a ceety wi a population o at least 250,000 that forms a conurbation wi ither ceeties in the Unitit States.
Housomeivver, northwastren an sootheastren states are dividit intae a sma nummer o lairge municipalities whareas central states are dividit intae a lairge nummer o smawer municipalities. As such, metropolitan auries in the northwast uisually dae no extend ower mair nor ane municipality (an figurs uisually report population for the entire municipality) whareas metropolitan auries in the center extend ower mony municipalities.
A few metropolitan auries extend ayont the limits o ane state: Greater Mexico Ceety (Federal Destrict, Mexico an Hidalgo), Puebla-Tlaxcala (Puebla an Tlaxcala, but excludes the ceety o Tlaxcala), Comarca Lagunera (Coahuila an Durango), an Tampico (Tamaulipas an Veracruz).
Leet o metropolitan auries in Mexico bi population
[eedit | eedit soorce]Thare is a total o fifty-sax metropolitan auries o Mexico as defined by the following government bodies:
- The National Institute of Statistics and Geography (INEGI).
- The Secretariat o Social Development (SEDESOL).
- The Naitional Population Cooncil (CONAPO).
Rank | Metropolitan Aurie | Federative Entity | 2010 Pop. | 2000 Pop. | Change |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Greater Mexico Ceety | DF, Mexico, Hidalgo | 20,137,152 | 18,396,677 | +9.46% |
2 | Greater Guadalajara | Jalisco | 4,434,252 | 3,699,136 | +19.87% |
3 | Greater Monterrey | Nuevo León | 4,106,054 | 3,374,361 | +21.68% |
4 | Greater Puebla | Puebla, Tlaxcala | 2,728,790 | 2,220,533 | +22.89% |
5 | Greater Toluca | Mexico | 1,936,126 | 1,451,801 | +33.36% |
6 | Greater Tijuana | Baja California | 1,751,302 | 1,352,035 | +29.53% |
7 | Greater León | Guanajuato | 1,609,717 | 1,269,179 | +26.83% |
8 | Greater Juárez | Chihuahua | 1,495,094 | 1,218,817 | +22.67% |
9 | Greater Torreón | Coahuila, Durango | 1,275,993 | 1,007,291 | +26.68% |
10 | Greater Querétaro | Querétaro | 1,097,028 | 816,481 | +34.36% |
11 | Greater San Luis Potosí | San Luis Potosí | 1,040,822 | 850,828 | +22.33% |
12 | Greater Mérida | Yucatán | 973,046 | 803,920 | +21.04% |
13 | Greater Mexicali | Baja California | 936,145 | 764,602 | +22.44% |
14 | Greater Aguascalientes | Aguascalientes | 932,298 | 707,516 | +31.77% |
15 | Greater Cuernavaca | Morelos | 875,598 | 738,326 | +18.59% |
16 | Greater Acapulco | Guerrero | 863,438 | 791,558 | +9.08% |
17 | Greater Tampico | Tamaulipas, Veracruz | 858,620 | 746,417 | +15.03% |
18 | Greater Chihuahua | Chihuahua | 851,971 | 696,495 | +22.32% |
19 | Greater Saltillo | Coahuila | 823,098 | 637,273 | +29.16% |
20 | Greater Morelia | Michoacán | 806,822 | 659,940 | +22.26% |
21 | Greater Veracruz | Veracruz | 801,122 | 642,680 | +24.65% |
22 | Greater Villahermosa | Tabasco | 755,416 | 600,580 | +25.78% |
23 | Reynosa–Greater Río Bravo | Tamaulipas | 725,793 | 524,692 | +38.33% |
24 | Greater Cancún | Quintana Roo | 676,238 | 431,128 | +56.85% |
25 | Greater Xalapa | Veracruz | 666,268 | 510,410 | +30.54% |
26 | Greater Tuxtla | Chiapas | 640,881 | 494,763 | +29.53% |
27 | Greater Oaxaca | Oaxaca | 593,522 | 460,350 | +28.93% |
28 | Greater Poza Rica | Veracruz | 513,308 | 443,419 | +15.76% |
29 | Greater Pachuca | Hidalgo | 512,180 | 375,022 | +36.57% |
30 | Tlaxcala–Apizaco | Tlaxcala | 499,504 | 408,401 | +22.31% |
31 | Greater Matamoros | Tamaulipas | 493,308 | 418,141 | +17.98% |
32 | Greater Cuautla | Morelos | 434,153 | 358,405 | +21.13% |
33 | Greater Tepic | Nayarit | 429,161 | 342,840 | +25.18% |
34 | Greater Orizaba | Veracruz | 410,372 | 367,021 | +11.81% |
35 | Greater Nuevo Laredo | Tamaulipas | 384,018 | 310,915 | +23.51% |
36 | Greater Puerto Vallarta | Jalisco, Nayarit | 379,934 | 244,536 | +55.37% |
37 | Greater Minatitlán | Veracruz | 356,020 | 323,389 | +10.09% |
38 | Greater Coatzacoalcos | Veracruz | 347,223 | 307,724 | +12.84% |
39 | Colima–Villa de Álvarez | Colima | 333,977 | 210,766 | +58.46% |
40 | Monclova–Frontera | Coahuila | 317,314 | 282,853 | +12.18% |
41 | Greater Córdoba | Veracruz | 315,996 | 276,553 | +14.26% |
42 | Zacatecas–Guadalupe | Zacatecas | 298,143 | 232,965 | +27.98% |
43 | Greater Tehuacán | Puebla | 296,894 | 240,507 | +23.45% |
44 | La Piedad–Pénjamo | Michoacán, Guanajuato | 249,854 | 229,372 | +8.93% |
45 | Zamora–Jacona | Michoacán | 249,805 | 216,048 | +15.62% |
46 | Greater Tulancingo | Hidalgo | 239,575 | 193,638 | +23.72% |
47 | Greater Tula | Hidalgo | 205,848 | 169,901 | +21.16% |
48 | Greater Guaymas | Sonora | 203,442 | 180,316 | +12.83% |
49 | Greater San Francisco del Rincón | Guanajuato | 182,330 | 145,017 | +25.73% |
50 | Greater Piedras Negras | Coahuila | 180,701 | 151,149 | +19.55% |
51 | Greater Tehuantepec | Oaxaca | 161,343 | 145,567 | +10.84% |
52 | Greater Tecomán | Colima | 141,465 | 127,863 | +10.64% |
53 | Greater Ocotlán | Jalisco | 141,365 | 125,027 | +13.07% |
54 | Greater Rioverde | San Luis Potosí | 135,423 | 128,935 | +5.03% |
55 | Greater Acayucan | Veracruz | 112,999 | 102,992 | +9.72% |
56 | Moroleón–Uriangato | Guanajuato | 108,648 | 100,063 | +8.58% |
Transnational conurbations
[eedit | eedit soorce]The Unitit States shares a 2,000-mile (3,000 km) border wi Mexico. The 2,000 mile is the maist frequently crossed internaitional border in the warld, wi aboot 250 million legal crossin ivery year.[2] The distribution o population an urban population in Mexico haes been chyngit significantly bi the economic interaction atween dounsets in its north an the Unitit States (U.S.). The increasin population concentration in the north o Mexico is strangly associatit wi the development o the maquila industries thare an the eventual economic effects o North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA).[4] Metropolitan auries locatit at the border wi the U.S. form transnaitional conurbations wi deep economic an demografic interaction. For example, the San Dieg-Tijuana metropolitan aurie consists o San Diego Coonty in the U.S. an the municipalities o Tijuana, Playas de Rosarito, an Tecate in Mexico. The total population o the region haes been estimatit tae be juist ower 5 million in 2009, makkin it bi far the lairgest bi-naitional metropolitan aurie shared atween the U.S. an Mexico.[5] The Naitional Population Cooncil (CONAPO) recognises the existence o such metropolitan auries and defines them as the municipalities that contain a ceety o at least 200,000 inhabitants which share processes o conurbation wi ceeties o the U.S.[1]
Rank | Metropolitan aurie | Mexican State | American State | Population |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Tijuana - San Diego | Baja California | Californie | 5,009,170[5] |
2 | El Paso - Juarez | Chihuahua | Texas | 2,461,538[5] |
3 | Reynosa - McAllen | Tamaulipas | Texas | 1,700,000[5] |
4 | Matamoros - Brownsville | Tamaulipas | Texas | 1,136,995[5] |
5 | Mexicali - Calexico | Baja California | Californie | 956,223[5] |
6 | Nuevo Laredo - Laredo | Tamaulipas | Texas | 747,494[5] |
7 | Nogales - Nogales | Sonora | Arizona | 234,809[nb 1] |
8 | Piedras Negras - Eagle Pass | Coahuila | Texas | 230,205[nb 2] |
9 | San Luis Río Colorado - San Luis | Sonora | Arizona | 188,152[nb 3] |
10 | Ciudad Acuña - Del Río | Coahuila | Texas | 183,750[nb 4] |
Megalopolis o central Mexico
[eedit | eedit soorce]A megalopolis is defined as a lang chain o continuous metropolitan auries, or territories that are relatively integratit amangst ilk ither, a clear example o which is the Northeast Megalopolis in the Unitit States. In 1996, the Programa General de Desarollo Urbano del Distrito Federal first proposed this concept tae refer tae the megalopolis o central Mexico, which wis later expandit bi PROAIRE, a metropolitan commission on the environment.[6] A megalopolis, is kent in Spainyie as a corona regional de ciudades ("regional ring o ceeties"). The Megalopolis o central Mexico wis defined tae be integratit bi the metropolitan auries o Mexico Ceety, Puebla, Cuernavaca, Toluca an Pachuca, which mey conform complex subregional rings thairsels an aw (i.e. Greater Puebla conformin a regional ring wi Atlixco, San Martín Texmelucan, Tlaxcala an Apizaco). The megalopolis o central Mexico is integratit bi 173 municipalities (91 o the state o Mexico, 29 o the state o Puebla, 37 o the state o Tlaxcala, 16 o Morelos an 16 o Hidalgo) an the 16 burghs o the Federal Destrict,[6] wi an approximate total population o amaist 25 million fowk.
See an aw
[eedit | eedit soorce]- Leet o metropolitan auries bi population
- Leet o metropolitan auries in the Americas bi population
- Leet o urban agglomerations bi population
- Leet o ceeties in Mexico
- Demografics o Mexico
Notes
[eedit | eedit soorce]- ↑ Sum o legal residents o Nogales, Sonora (213,976) an Nogales, Arizona (20,833).
- ↑ Sum o legal residents o Eagle Pass Metropolitan Area's population (48,401) an Piedras Negras, Coahuila (154,360).
- ↑ Sum o legal residents o San Luis Río Colorado, Sonora (164,342) an San Luis, Arizona (23,810).
- ↑ Sum o legal residents o Ciudad Acuña, Coahuila (135,605) an Del Rio, Texas (46,682).
References
[eedit | eedit soorce]- ↑ a b c s/espanol/metodologias/otras/zonas_met.pdf CONAPO Áreas Metropolitanas
- ↑ a b David M. Bridgeland, Ron Zahavi. Business Modeling: A Practical Guide to Realizing Business Value. Morgan Kaufmann, 2000. p. 134. ISBN 0-12-374151-3.
- ↑ "Borders and Law Enforcement". U.S. Embassy Mexico. Archived frae the original on 3 September 2009. Retrieved 8 December 2009.
- ↑ Michael Pacione. Urban geography: a global perspective. Routledge, 2005. p. 105. ISBN 0-415-34305-4.
- ↑ a b c d e f g "Metropolitan areas in the Americas". World Gazetteer. Archived frae the original on 1 October 2007. Retrieved 8 December 2009.
- ↑ a b Área metropolitana del Valle de México PROAIRE
Freemit airtins
[eedit | eedit soorce]- National Population Council (CONAPO) — offeecial wabsteid. (in Spaingie)
- National Institute of Statistics and Geography (INEGI) — offeecial wabsteid. (in Spaingie)