Y09W42VC Theme Words — Urbanisation & community

This module focuses on vocabulary connected to the theme of Urbanisation & community. The words in this set are used when discussing the growth of cities, the changing nature of neighbourhoods and the social bonds that form and fracture as populations shift. Many of these terms appear in geography, sociology and urban planning discourse. Developing fluency with this vocabulary helps students analyse the social and environmental consequences of how people choose to live and organise themselves.

Word in Context (Theme: Urbanisation & community)

These three words help you discuss Urbanisation & community with greater precision and confidence. Focus on the small difference in each word's meaning so you can choose the right word in formal writing.

infrastructure

/ˈɪnfrəstrʌktʃə/

in‑fra‑struc‑ture

noun

The basic physical and organisational systems and services needed for the operation of a society or enterprise.

Example: Rapid urbanisation places enormous pressure on existing infrastructure — roads, water systems, schools and hospitals must grow alongside the population.

Synonyms: systems, facilities, services

Collocations: public infrastructure, urban infrastructure, infrastructure investment

density

/ˈdɛnsɪti/

den‑si‑ty

noun

The quantity of something per unit area or volume; in urban contexts, the number of people or dwellings per area.

Word family: dense (adj.), densely (adv.)

Example: Urban planners debate the optimal density for sustainable city living, balancing affordability with open space and community wellbeing.

Synonyms: concentration, population density, compactness

Collocations: population density, high density, residential density

diverse

/daɪˈvɜːs/

di‑verse

adjective

Showing a great deal of variety; made up of many different types of people or things.

Word family: diversity (n.), diversify (v.)

Example: Melbourne's most liveable neighbourhoods tend to be diverse — culturally, economically and architecturally — rather than uniform.

Synonyms: varied, heterogeneous, multicultural

Collocations: culturally diverse, increasingly diverse, diverse community

Academic Vocab

question

/ˈkwɛstʃən/

ques‑tion

verb | [question – questioned – questioned]

To raise doubts about the truth or validity of something; to interrogate an assumption or claim.

Word family: questioning (adj.)

Example: Urban planners have begun to question the assumption that high-density living necessarily reduces quality of life.

Synonyms: challenge, interrogate, dispute

Collocations: question the assumption, question the approach, question whether

interrogate

/ɪnˈtɛrəɡeɪt/

in‑ter‑ro‑gate

verb | [interrogate – interrogated – interrogated]

To question something closely and critically, examining it in depth to reveal assumptions or contradictions.

Word Breakdown: inter- (prefix meaning 'between' or 'mutually')

Word family: interrogation (n.)

Example: Community advocates interrogate planning decisions to determine whose interests are being served and whose are being overlooked.

Synonyms: examine, probe, question closely

Collocations: interrogate the assumption, critically interrogate, interrogate the evidence

challenge

/ˈtʃælɪndʒ/

chal‑lenge

verb | [challenge – challenged – challenged]

To question the truth or legitimacy of something; to push against accepted norms or practices.

Word family: challenging (adj.)

Example: The residents' group successfully challenged the development approval in the courts, citing inadequate community consultation.

Synonyms: contest, dispute, oppose

Collocations: challenge the decision, challenge assumptions, challenge authority

problematise

/prɒˈblɛmətaɪz/

prob‑lem‑a‑tise

verb | [problematise – problematised – problematised]

To treat something as a problem worthy of examination; to raise questions about something taken for granted.

Word family: problematic (adj.)

Example: Urban scholars have problematised the narrative that gentrification improves neighbourhoods, pointing to the displacement of long-term residents.

Synonyms: question, challenge, complicate

Collocations: problematise the notion, problematise the assumption, productively problematise

contest

/kənˈtɛst/

con‑test

verb | [contest – contested – contested]

To formally dispute or argue against a claim, decision or policy.

Word family: contested (adj.), contestation (n.)

Example: The decision to demolish the heritage-listed building was contested by residents, architects and heritage advocates alike.

Synonyms: dispute, challenge, argue against

Collocations: contest the decision, highly contested, contest the claim

this questions

/ðɪs ˈkwɛstʃənz/

this ques‑tions

phrase

Used in academic writing to signal that a point or piece of evidence challenges or casts doubt on an accepted idea.

Example: High-density developments consistently receive lower liveability scores in resident surveys; this questions the planning assumption that density alone creates vibrant communities.

Synonyms: this challenges, this interrogates, this disputes

Collocations: this questions the assumption that, this questions whether, this directly questions

Confusing Words

mitigate vs militate

These two verbs are frequently confused because they look similar and are both relatively formal, but they describe fundamentally different things.

  • mitigate — mitigate to make something less severe, serious or painful; to lessen the impact of something harmful; for example, ‘The government introduced flood barriers to mitigate the impact of rising sea levels on coastal communities.’
  • militate — militate to be a powerful factor working against something — often used in the phrase "militate against"; for example, ‘The lack of affordable housing in the city militates against the social diversity that urban planners claim to be pursuing.’

Memory rule: A key distinction: to 'mitigate' is to reduce or soften harm (think of 'mitigating circumstances' in law); to 'militate' is to work forcefully against something (almost always followed by 'against'). If you want to say something reduces a problem, use 'mitigate'; if you want to say something works against a goal, use 'militate against'.