The urban planet : knowledge towards sustainable cities

Author(s)

    • Elmqvist, Thomas
    • Bai, Xuemei
    • Griffith, Corrie
    • Maddox, David
    • McPhearson, Timon
    • Parnell, Susan
    • Romero-Lankaok, Patricia
    • Simon, David
    • Watkins, Mark

Bibliographic Information

The urban planet : knowledge towards sustainable cities

edited by Thomas Elmqvist ... [et al.]

Cambridge University Press, 2018

  • : hardback

Available at  / 3 libraries

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Note

Includes bibliographical references

Other editors: Xuemei Bai, Niki Frantzeskaki, Corrie Griffith, David Maddox, Timon McPhearson, Susan Parnell, Patricia Romero-Lankao, David Simon, Mark Watkins

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Global urbanization promises better services, stronger economies, and more connections; it also carries risks and unforeseeable consequences. To deepen our understanding of this complex process and its importance for global sustainability, we need to build interdisciplinary knowledge around a systems approach. Urban Planet takes an integrative look at our urban environment, bringing together scholars from a diverse range of disciplines: from sociology and political science to evolutionary biology, geography, economics and engineering. It includes the perspectives of often neglected voices: architects, journalists, artists and activists. The book provides a much needed cross-scale perspective, connecting challenges and solutions on a local scale with drivers and policy frameworks on a regional and global scale. The authors argue that to overcome the major challenges we are facing, we must embark on a large-scale reinvention of how we live together, grounded in inclusiveness and sustainability. This title is also available Open Access.

Table of Contents

  • Introduction
  • Part I. Dynamic Urban Planet: 1. Global urbanization: perspectives and trends
  • 2. Embracing urban complexity
  • 3. Understanding, implementing, and tracking urban metabolism is key to urban futures
  • 4. Live with risk while reducing vulnerability
  • 5. Harness urban complexity for health and wellbeing
  • 6. Macro-economy and urban productivity
  • Part II. Global Urban Sustainable Development: 7. Rethinking urban sustainability and resilience
  • 8. Indicators for measuring urban sustainable development and resilience
  • 9. The UN, the urban sustainable development goal and the new urban agenda
  • 10. Utilizing urban living laboratories for social innovation
  • 11. Can big data make a difference for urban management?
  • 12. Collaborative and equitable urban citizen science
  • Part III. Urban Transformations to Sustainability: 13. Sustainability transformation emerging from better governance
  • 14. To transform cities, support civil society
  • 15. Governance and the new politics of collaboration and contestation
  • 16. Seeds of the future, found in the present
  • Part IV. Provocations from Practice: 17. Sustainability, Karachi, and other irreconcilables
  • 18. What knowledge do the cities themselves need?
  • 19. Banksy and the biologist: redrawing the twenty-first century city
  • 20. Every community needs a forest of imagination
  • 21. How can we shift from a imaged-based city to a life-based city?
  • 22. A chimera called smart cities
  • 23. Beyond fill-in-the-blank cities
  • 24. Persuading policy makers to implement sustainable city plans
  • 25. To live or not to live: urbanisation and the knowledge worker
  • 26. City fragmentation and the commons
  • 27. Cities as global organisms
  • 28. From concrete structures to green diversity: ecological landscape design for restoring urban nature and children's play
  • 29. Building cities: a view from India
  • 30. The barking dog syndrome
  • 31. Overcoming inertia and reinventing 'retreat'
  • 32. Money for old rope
  • 33. An aesthetic appreciation of tagging
  • 34. Understanding Arab cities
  • 35. Who can implement the sustainable development goals?
  • 36. Achieving sustainable cities by focusing on urban underserved
  • 37. The rebellion of memory
  • 38. Cities don't need 'big' data - they need innovations that connect to the local
  • 39. Digital urbanisation and the end of big cities
  • 40. The art of engagement / activating curiosity
  • 41. Nairobi's illegal city makers
  • 42. Active environmental citizens with receptive government officials can enact change
  • 43. The sea wall
  • 44. Academics and non-academics: who's who in changing the culture of knowledge creation?
  • 45. Private fears in public spaces
  • 46. Leadership: science and policy as uncomfortable bedfellows
  • 47. Sketches of an emotional geography towards a new citizenship
  • 48. The shift in urban technology innovation
  • 49. Greening cities: our pressing moral imperative
  • 50. Recognition deficit and struggle for unifying city fragments
  • 51. Disrespecting the knowledge of place
  • 52. Broadening our vision to find a new eco-spiritual way of living.

by "Nielsen BookData"

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