Institutional Dynamics of Transformative Climate Urbanism: Remaking Rules in Messy Contexts
A key challenge of transformative climate urbanism is to understand how institutions can be deliberately changed within socially heterogeneous, historically encumbered, and politically contested settings. Drawing on multiple bodies of literature, I develo
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Climate Urbanism “In times of a fast-changing world characterized by growing population, environmental change, biodiversity loss, contested economic structures, frequency of natural hazards and climate change, it is time to not only act but also ponder about possible futures in a planet of cities. This book is a timely addition, as a text that walks us through a soul-searching process on the blunt of climate change on cities and how city futures can be shaped. The authors highlight that there won’t be a single vision for future cities but multiple futures and contextually based. The examples take us from climate concerns to how social systems, urban infrastructure and institutions can be reconfigured to design city futures that address climate threats that are just and inclusive in a new climate urbanism. The climate urbanism that this book examines in detail illustrates how important and critical cities are to respond to the climate urgency. That education, training and new professionalism is important for visioning and shaping future climate urbanism. An academic and provocative book that is a good source for education, training and curriculum development and for readers interested in policy transformation for city futures that is socially transformative climate urbanism driven by social movements across cities in both Global North and South. This is the material for city futures.” —Shuaib Lwasa, Associate Professor, Department of Geography Geoinformatics and Climatic Sciences, Makerere University “With the outskirts of major cities still scorched by the devastating 2019–2020 fires season and major environmental issues in question at the heart of the COVID-19 crisis, there might be no better time to reform our climate approaches in cities. In Climate Urbanism Robin, While and Castán Broto prompt us to do so in a critical and progressive way. The volume seeks to make amend to the limits of climate-focused urban research, and to draw up a new agenda for action. In doing so they chart, collaboratively in dialogues with seventeen authors, what a research and action agenda for a ‘climate urbanism’ proper would look like. Rich in insights, both theoretical and empirical, emanating from a variety of viewpoints and experiences, from Colorado Springs and Maputo to Nepal via Malawi, from resilience and risk to the role of local governments in international policy via intergenerational learning, the volume is a truly refreshing mix of expertise with an explicitly transformative aim. Centrally,
Climate Urbanism does so as a new communal project asking us, academics, practitioners and even the broader public not to forget that urbanism is a broader undertaking that emergences from recognition of its multiple interpretations, and that there is no one single solution available out there. Progressive, emancipatory and explicit about its own contradiction, the book is just exactly the kind of urbanism it advocates, and one that is much needed at a time of profound crisis—really a must read for anyone itching to get out there and
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