Across
- 3. Rather than being called "global cities", these types of cities in the South are often called [x]Regions
- 5. Hulchanski showed Toronto's neighbourhoods becoming increasingly unequal, in his report, The [x] Cities of Toronto
- 7. The thing we call a (1-Down) is the outcome of a [x] that we call (16-Across)
- 10. [x] Measures of (14-Across) set a cut-off line at some minimum income needed to maintain a basic standard of living
- 11. "More than 50% of the world's population now lives in cities..." is an example of the urban [x] thesis
- 12. This type of city, often in the North, was coined in the 1960s by Peter Hall, and later popularized in Friedmann's [x] City Hypothesis
- 14. Separate and distinct from income (17-Across) and (8-Down), [x] can be defined as lacking the income required to purchase basic life necessities
- 16. The thing we call a (1-Down) is the outcome of a (7-Across) that we call [x]
- 17. Income [x] describes a situation in which income is distributed unevenly ("pyramid")
- 18. Called 'renewal' or 'revitalization', [x] is a process of attracting affluent people into formerly deteriorating urban areas, often resulting in poorer residents being displaced
- 19. The second of four big words Dylan knows, [x], refers to the "theory of being"
- 20. The [x] Coefficient is widely considered to be the 'gold standard' for measuring income (17-Across)
Down
- 1. The thing we call a [x] is the outcome of a (7-Across) that we call (16-Across)
- 2. The Housing [x] is a broad term describing interrelationships between all those involved in the production and consumption (mmm gingerbread) of housing
- 4. This process, [x], refers to the increasing integration, interaction, and interconnectivity of people around the globe
- 6. The first of four big words Dylan knows, [x], refers to the "theory of knowledge"
- 8. Income [x] describes a process in which income concentrates into two separate poles or groups ("hourglass")
- 9. [x] Measures of (14-Across) set a cut-off line in relation to the average income in a city (or region, province, etc.)
- 13. [x] is a racially-discriminatory process, where mortgage lenders classify neighbourhoods using four colours to represent their 'riskiness'
- 15. One of the causes of the global financial crisis, a [x] mortgage refers to a loan offered to borrowers with less than prime credit scores
