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- Abingdon, Oxon ; New York, NY : Routledge, 2021
- Description
- Book — 1 online resource ( xii, 264 pages) : maps, illustrations
- Summary
-
- Chapter 1: Urban Risk and Tourism in Africa: An overview, Llewellyn Leonard, Regis Musavengane and Pius Siakwah Theme
- 1: Urban tourism and environmental pollution risks
- Chapter 2: Examining 'toxic tourism' as a new form of alternative urban tourism and for environmental justice: The case of the South Durban Industrial Basin, South Africa, Llewellyn Leonard and Robin Nunkoo
- Chapter 3: Waste management and urban risk in Livingstone City, Zambia: The sustainability of the hospitality sector, Wilma Sichombo Nchito and Euphemia Mwale
- Chapter 4: The political economy of unplanned urban sprawl, waste and tourism development in Ghana, Pius Siakwah
- Chapter 5: Environmental risk management and township tourism development in Alexandra, Johannesburg, South Africa, Llewellyn Leonard and Ayanda Dladla Theme
- 2: Peace tourism, battlefields and war risks
- Chapter 6: Megasport Events and Urban Risks: FIFA 2010, the African Bid and Xenophobic Violence, Brij Maharaj
- Chapter 7: Elections risk and urban tourism in Sub-Saharan African cities: Exploring peace through tourism in Harare, Zimbabwe, Regis Musavengane
- Chapter 8: The role of responsible tourism in peace-building and social inclusion in war risk cities: Evidence from Goma, Democratic Republic of Congo, Clement Longondjo Etambakonga and Dieudonne Trinto Mugangu Theme
- 3: Tourism, climate change and flood risks
- Chapter 9: Factors influencing tourism accommodations' lack of preparedness for flooding in Lagos, Nigeria, Eromose Ebhuoma and Llewellyn Leonard
- Chapter 10: Climate change impacts and adaptation strategies for tourism hotspots Mombasa and Cape Town, Francini van Staden
- Chapter 11: Risk of flood impacts on tourism in coastal cities of West Africa: a case study of Accra, Ghana, Raphael Ane Atanga and Tembi Tichaawa
- Chapter 12: The nexus of climate change and urban tourism in South Africa: Triaging challenges and optimising opportunities, Felix Donkor and Kevin Mearns Theme
- 4: Inclusive urban tourism and enclaves
- Chapter 13: Human Settlements and Tourism Development in Kenya: Prospects for Tackling Urban Risks in Informal Settlements, Prudence Khumalo
- Chapter 14: Conservation tourism challenges and opportunities on the Cape Flats, South Africa, Michael Dyssel
- Chapter 15: Resilience, Inclusiveness and Challenges of Cosmopolitan Cities' Heritage Tourism: The Case of the Balancing Rocks in Epworth, Harare, Zibanai Zhou
- Chapter 16: Prospects and challenges of sustainable urban tourism in Windhoek: poverty, inequality and urban risks linkages, Erisher Woyo
- Chapter 17: Navigating urban tourism amidst environmental, political and social risks: Conclusion, Regis Musavengane, Llewellyn Leonard and Pius Siakwah.
- (source: Nielsen Book Data)
(source: Nielsen Book Data)
- Bekkouche, Ammara, author.
- Oran, Algérie : Editions CRASC, 2019
- Description
- Book — 142 pages : color illustrations, color maps ; 24 cm
- Online
SAL3 (off-campus storage)
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HT169 .A4 B449 2019 | Unavailable |
- Dasgupta, Susmita.
- Washington, D.C. : The World Bank, 2020
- Description
- Book — 1 online resource (24 p).
- Summary
-
The World Health Organization attributes about 3.3 million annual premature deaths to outdoor air pollution in low- and middle-income countries. Comprehensive pollution monitoring in urban areas has been too costly for many developing countries; yet sparse information has hindered cost-effective pollution management strategies. Global information technologies offer a potential escape from this information trap, but their accuracy remains uncertain. This paper uses ground-based measures of fine particulates and nitrogen dioxide, provided by the CAMS-3 Darussalam monitoring station in Dhaka, Bangladesh, to test three global technologies: the European Space Agency's Sentinel-5P, the National Aeronautics and Space Administration's Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer, and Google Traffic. The results indicate that all three global technologies can provide useful information for extension of air pollution measurement beyond the few areas that are currently monitored by ground stations. Each technology tracks ground-based fine particulates measures with high significance, and the European Space Agency's Sentinel-5P and Google Traffic perform similarly for ground-based nitrogen dioxide measures. Google Traffic can provide accurate tracking at higher spatial and temporal resolution than the satellite sources, but only for emissions from motor vehicles in major metro areas. The Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer and the European Space Agency's Sentinel-5P capture the effects of emissions from other sources at all locations
4. Transportation and the Environment [electronic resource] : : A Review of Empirical Literature [2020]
- Li, Shanjun.
- Washington, D.C. : The World Bank, 2020
- Description
- Book — 1 online resource (57 p).
- Summary
-
In urban areas around the world, increasing motorization and growing travel demand make the urban transportation sector an ever-greater contributor to local air pollution and greenhouse gas emissions. The situation is particularly acute in developing countries, where growing metropolitan regions suffer some of the world's highest levels of air pollution. Policies that seek to develop and manage this transportation sector-to meet rising demand linked to economic growth and safeguard the environment and human health-have had strikingly different results, with some inadvertently exacerbating the traffic and pollution they seek to mitigate. This paper provides an overview of the findings of the recent literature on the impacts of a host of urban transportation policies used in developed and developing country settings. The paper identifies research challenges and future areas of study of transportation policies, which can have important, long-lasting impacts on urban life and global climate change
- Checker, Melissa, author.
- New York : New York University Press, [2020]
- Description
- Book — 1 online resource
- Summary
-
Uncovers the hidden costs and contradictions of sustainable policies in an era driven by real estate development From state-of-the-art parks to rooftop gardens, efforts to transform New York City's unsightly industrial waterfronts into green, urban oases have received much public attention. In The Sustainability Myth, Melissa Checker uncovers the hidden costs-and contradictions-of the city's ambitious sustainability agenda in light of its equally ambitious redevelopment imperatives. Focusing on industrial waterfronts and historically underserved places like Harlem and Staten Island's North Shore, Checker takes an in-depth look at the dynamics of environmental gentrification, documenting the symbiosis between eco-friendly initiatives and high-end redevelopment and its impact on out-of-the-way, non-gentrifying neighborhoods. At the same time, she highlights the valiant efforts of local environmental justice activists who work across racial, economic, and political divides to challenge sustainability's false promises and create truly viable communities. The Sustainability Myth is a cautionary, eye-opening tale, taking a hard-but ultimately hopeful-look at environmental justice activism and the politics of sustainability.
(source: Nielsen Book Data)
- Moga, Steven T., author.
- Chicago : The University of Chicago Press, 2020
- Description
- Book — 1 online resource
- Summary
-
- Introduction : The low wards
- From bottomlands to bottom neighborhoods
- Harlem Flats : New York, New York
- Black Bottom : Nashville, Tennessee
- Swede Hollow : Saint Paul, Minnesota
- The Flats : Los Angeles, California
- Landscapes of poverty and power
- Epilogue : lowland legacies
(source: Nielsen Book Data)
- Carías, Armando, author.
- 1a edición - [Caracas] : Fundación Editorial El Perro y La Rana, [2019]
- Description
- Book — 115 pages : Illustrations ; 25 cm
- Summary
-
- Comunicallejeando
- ¡Arriba el calle!
- Bitácora de viaje
- El derecho a la comunicación
- Modelo para desarmar
- Un tilín mejores para cerrar
- Online
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HT243 .V4 C37 2019 | Unavailable At bindery |
- Bullock, Jane, author.
- 1st edition. - Auerbach Publications, 2017.
- Description
- Book — 1 online resource (312 pages) Digital: text file.
- Summary
-
The climate has changed and communities across America are living with the consequences: rapid sea level rise, multi-state wildfires, heat waves, and enduring drought. Living with Climate Change: How Communities Are Surviving and Thriving in a Changing Climate details the steps cities are taking now to protect lives and businesses, to reduce their.
- Abingdon, Oxon ; New York, NY : Routledge, 2020
- Description
- Book — xi, 265 pages : illustrations (black and white) ; 26 cm
- Summary
-
- Acknowledgements, The Contributors, Introduction: What Is a Good City? Simon Goldhill, PART I ENGAGEMENT AND SPACE
- Chapter 1 The Public Realm Richard Sennett,
- Chapter 2 On Urban Failure Ash Amin,
- Chapter 3 On the Possibility of Urban Citizenship: Inclusive Identitities, Exclusive Spaces Nezar AlSayyad and Sujin Eom, PART II INFRASTRUCTURE AND AFFECT
- Chapter 4 Urban Atmospheres Matthew Gandy,
- Chapter 5 Atmospheric Urban Geopolitics Sara Fregonese,
- Chapter 6 Becoming a Crowd: Multiple Narratives, Identities and Ambiguities: People's Places in the Near East/Levant: Tahrir Square, Cairo, Taksim Square, Istanbul, Rabin Square, Tel Aviv Mike Turner and Yonka Erkan PART III CONFLICT AND STRUCTURE
- Chapter 7 The Conditions of Urbicide Wendy Pullan,
- Chapter 8 Sovereignty and the Urban Question: Exploring the Material Foundations for Imagined Communities of Allegiance in Conflict Cities Diane E. Davis,
- Chapter 9 Precariousness and Protest: Negotiating Urban Refuge in Cairo and Tel Aviv Irit Katz PART IV CURATING THE CITY
- Chapter 10 The Levantine Age: Cosmopolitanism and Colonialism in the Eastern Mediterranean Nasser Rabbat
- Chapter 11 Excavating Urban Imaginaries in Tehran Somaiyeh Falahat,
- Chapter 12 A Spectral Sumud: Jaffa in Kamal Aljafari's Port of Memory Mezna Qato and Sadia Shirazi, Index.
- (source: Nielsen Book Data)
(source: Nielsen Book Data)
- Online
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HT169 .M628 B45 2020 | Unknown |
- Miller, David, 1958- author.
- Toronto ; Buffalo ; London : Aevo UTP, [2020]
- Description
- Book — 1 online resource
- Summary
-
- Foreword Preface
- 1. Plans
- 2. Energy and Electricity
- 3. Existing Buildings
- 4. New Buildings
- 5. Public Transportation
- 6. Personal and Other Transportation
- 7. Waste
- Epilogue Afterword.
- (source: Nielsen Book Data)
(source: Nielsen Book Data)
11. Through time and the city : notes on Rome [2021]
- Cheramie, Kristi, author.
- Abingdon, Oxon ; New York, NY : Routledge, 2021
- Description
- Book — vii, 314 pages : illustrations (black and white, and colour), maps (black and white, and colour) ; 26 cm
- Summary
-
- Chapter 1: On Rome, by Way of Introduction
- Section 1: Foundational Systems
- Chapter 2: On a Geological Inheritance
- Chapter 3: On the Space of Flooding
- Section 2: Umbrellas and Indicators
- Chapter 4: On Climate, Fever, and Force
- Chapter 5: On the Projective City
- Chapter 6: On Ritual Urbanism and the Via Papalis
- Section 3: Keystones
- Chapter 7: On the Magnitude of Relics
- Chapter 8: On Stone, Continuity, and Romantias
- Chapter 9: On Time and the City
- Appendix
- Bibliography
- Index.
- (source: Nielsen Book Data)
(source: Nielsen Book Data)
- Online
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HT243 .I82 R663 2021 | Available |
- Pittsburgh, Pa. : University of Pittsburgh Press, [2020]
- Description
- Book — x, 406 pages : illustrations (some color), maps (some color) ; 24 cm
- Summary
-
Known as the Windy City and the Hog Butcher to the World, Chicago has earned a more apt sobriquet - City of Lake and Prairie - with this compelling, innovative, and deeply researched environmental history. Sitting at the southwestern tip of Lake Michigan, one of the largest freshwater bodies in the world, and on the eastern edge of the tallgrass prairies that fill much of the North American interior, early residents in the land that Chicago now occupies enjoyed natural advantages, economic opportunities, and global connections over centuries, from the Native Americans who first inhabited the region to the urban dwellers who built a metropolis in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. As one millennium ended and a new one began, these same features sparked a distinctive Midwestern environmentalism aimed at preserving local ecosystems. Drawing on its contributors' interdisciplinary talents, this volume reveals a rich but often troubled landscape shaped by communities of color, workers, and activists as well as complex human relations with industry, waterways, animals, and disease.
(source: Nielsen Book Data)
- Online
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GE155 .I3 C58 2020 | Unknown |
- Moga, Steven T., author.
- Chicago : The University of Chicago Press, 2020
- Description
- Book — 219 pages : illustrations, maps ; 24 cm
- Summary
-
- Introduction : The low wards
- From bottomlands to bottom neighborhoods
- Harlem Flats : New York, New York
- Black Bottom : Nashville, Tennessee
- Swede Hollow : Saint Paul, Minnesota
- The Flats : Los Angeles, California
- Landscapes of poverty and power
- Epilogue : lowland legacies
(source: Nielsen Book Data)
- Online
Green Library
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HT167 .M628 2020 | Unknown |
14. Urban sustainability : a global perspective [2012]
- East Lansing : Michigan State University Press, ©2012.
- Description
- Book — 1 online resource (714 pages) Digital: data file.
- Summary
-
- Foreword
- Harm de Blij; Preface; Overview
- Jeb Brugmann; Advancing toward Urban Sustainability: The Pursuit of Equity
- Igor Vojnovic; Urban Environmental Management in Shanghai: A Multiscale Perspective
- Wei Tu, Daniel Sui, and Weichun Ma; The Urban Expansion and Sustainability Challenge of Cities in China's West: The Case of Urumqi
- Jiaguo Qi, Peilei Fan, and Xi Chen; Sustainable Manufacturing in Nagoya: Exploring the Dynamics of Japan's Competitive Advantage
- Ronald Kalafsky.
- The Sufficiency Economy, Sustainable Development, and Agricultural Townsin Thailand: The Case of Nang Rong
- Pariwate Varnakovida and Joseph MessinaDeconcentration in the Tel Aviv Metropolitan Area: Governance, Markets, and the Quest for Sustainability
- Eran Razin; The Crisis of Consociational Democracy in Beirut: Conflict Transformation and Sustainability through Electoral Reform
- Imad Salamey; Segmentation and Enclavization in Urban Development: The Sustainable City in India
- Darshini Mahadevia.
- Urban Sustainability and Automobile Dependence in an Australian Context
- Peter Newman and Jeffrey KenworthyUrban Sustainability Rhetoric and Neoliberal Realities: Durban
- A City in Transition
- Brij Maharaj and Sultan Khan; Residential Marginality, Erasure, and Intractability in Addis Ababa
- Assefa Mehretu and Tegegne Gebre-Egziabher; Water Provision for and by the Peri-urban Poor: Public-Community Partnerships or Citizens Coproduction?
- Adriana Allen.
- Economic Reorganization, Social Transformation, and Urban Sustainability in Argentina: The Case of Metropolitan Buenos Aires
- Ricardo Gomez-Insausti and Analia S. ConteUrban Renewal, Favelas, and Guanabara Bay: Environmental Justice and Sustainability in Rio de Janeiro
- Brian J. Godfrey; Neoliberal Restructuring, Poverty, and Urban Sustainability in Kingston, Jamaica
- Beverley Mullings; Housing and Urban Sustainability: A Los Angeles Case Study
- Victoria Basolo.
- The Colors That Shaped a City: The Role of Racial and Class Tensions in Inhibiting Urban Sustainability, the Detroit Context
- Igor Vojnovic and Joe T. DardenThe Role of Ethnicity and Race in Supporting Sustainable Urban Environments
- June Manning Thomas; Recent Planning and Development in Toronto: Moving Toward Smart Growth?
- Pierre Filion; Planning for Sustainable Development in Montreal: A Qualified Success
- Raphaël Fischler and Jeanne M. Wolfe.
- Oil for Food
- Energy, Equity, and Evolution of Urban Supermarket Locations: An Edmonton, Alberta, Case Study
- Nairne Cameron, Karen E. Smoyer-Tomic, Vladimir Yasenovskiy, and Carl Amrhein.
(source: Nielsen Book Data)
- Vitz, Matthew, 1979- author.
- Durham : Duke University Press, 2018
- Description
- Book — 1 online resource (xi, 338 pages) : illustrations, maps
- Summary
-
- List of Abbreviations vii Acknowledgments ix Introduction
- 1 I. The Making of a Metropolitan Environment
- 1. The Porfirian Metropolitan Environment
- 19
- 2. Revolution and the Metropolitan Environment
- 51 II. Spaces of a Metropolitan Environment
- 3. Water and Hygiene in the City
- 81
- 4. The City and Its Forests
- 109
- 5. Desiccation, Dust, and Engineered Waterscapes
- 136
- 6. The Political Ecology of Working-Class Settlements
- 164
- 7. Industrialization and Environmental Technocracy
- 193 Conclusion
- 218 Notes
- 235 Bibliography
- 291 Index 321.
- (source: Nielsen Book Data)
(source: Nielsen Book Data)
- Ville végétale. English
- Mathis, Charles-François, author.
- Winwick, Cambridgeshire : White Horse Press, [2020]
- Description
- Book — 332 pages : illustrations (some color) ; 24 cm
- Summary
-
- Introduction. Greenery scenery: Plant life in the city, seventeenth to twenty-first centuries
- Chapter 1. Why bring Nature into town?
- Chapter 2. Green fingers: Actors in the vegetalisation of towns
- Chapter 3. Turning the town green: A challenge
- Chapter 4. Vegetal theatre
- Chapter 5. Wellbeing, living well
- Chapter 6. The urban jungle? Plant life... wild life
- Chapter 7. The economics of the vegetal
- Chapter 8. Nature and learning.
- (source: Nielsen Book Data)
(source: Nielsen Book Data)
- Online
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HT243 .F8 M3813 2020 | Unknown |
17. Vers des villes africaines durables [2020]
- Paris : FNAU : Gallimard, [2020]
- Description
- Book — 191 pages : color illustrations, color maps, plans ; 23 cm
- Summary
-
- Penser les villes africaines hors des sentiers battus
- Enjeux et stratégie nationale pour les villes du Cameroun
- Pour un partenariat renforcé Afrique-France
- 1 Enjeux urbains et territoriaux
- Villes durables en Afrique subsaharienne. Quels enjeux pour la gestion urbaine et la gouvernante des territoires ?
- Ouagadougou, construire une capitale durable pour faire face au défi démographique
- Le Grand Ouarzazate, une ville oasienne du XXIe siècle
- Pour des villes africaines en commun
- Le Sommet Afrique-France 2020 et ses objectifs
- Planification urbaine
- Pour des villes durables et responsables
- Les métropoles africaines face à la financiarisation du monde
- La question foncière pour répondre à la croissance accélérée des villes d'Afrique subsaharienne
- Zenata, une écocité marocaine
- "Bamako la coquette nourricière"
- Une dynamique de création d'agences urbaines africaines
- Les défis de l'habitat abordable et durable
- Les habitants, acteurs du changement des quartiers informels au Ghana
- La modernisation de l'architecture africaine : regard sur la formation des architectes
- Yaoundé, un habitat en mutation
- L'évolution de l'habitat social à Malabo, en Guinée équatoriale
- Le patrimoine urbain de Grand-Bassam en Côte d'Ivoire comme vecteur de développement durable
- Mobilité
- Les défis de la mobilité dans les villes africaines
- Le plan de mobilité urbaine durable de Yaoundé
- Le plan de mobilité urbaine durable de Douala
- Transition numérique
- Transition numérique et villes durables en Afrique
- Le numérique, accélérateur des objectifs de développement durable pour les villes africaines
- Aston, transition numérique pour des villes africaines durables et inclusives
- Kigali, un hub de la transformation numérique en Afrique
- Pour des communs numériques africains
- Financement
- Finances locales : le maillon faible
- L'Agence Afrique territoriale. Pour faciliter l'accès au marché financier
- Villes africaines et climat : un enjeu de financement
- Climate Chance, un réseau de coopération pour l'action climat des villes africaines
- Coopération et mise en réseau
- La coopération décentralisée pour des villes durables en Afrique
- Le dialogue entre élus français et élus africains, moteur de la dynamique des territoires
- Une coopération pour renforcer les capacités de planification et d'urbanisme dans le Grand Tunis
- Ourazazate : ancrage historique et visibilité internationale
- Bangui : reconstruire une vision partagée de la ville après la crise humanitaire
- Habitat informel, ville informelle à Pikine, banlieue de Dakar
- Accompagner la configuration de l'agence d'urbanisme d'Antananarivo
- Donner un nouvel élan à la coopération entre les collectivités africaines et françaises
- Des clés pour la transition urbaine en Afrique
- La transition urbaine en Afrique.
- Online
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HT243 .A47 V47 2020 | Unavailable In transit |
- Gullion, Jessica Smartt, 1972- author.
- Cambridge, Massachusetts ; London, England : The MIT Press, [2015]
- Description
- Book — 1 online resource (xiv, 191 pages)
- Summary
-
When natural gas drilling moves into an urban or a suburban neighborhood, a two-hundred-foot-high drill appears on the other side of a back yard fence and diesel trucks clog a quiet two-lane residential street. Children seem to be having more than the usual number of nosebleeds. There are so many local cases of cancer that the elementary school starts a cancer support group. In this book, Jessica Smartt Gullion examines what happens when natural gas extraction by means of hydraulic fracturing, or "fracking, " takes place not on wide-open rural land but in a densely populated area with homes, schools, hospitals, parks, and businesses. Gullion focuses on fracking in the Barnett Shale, the natural-gas--rich geological formation under the Dallas--Fort Worth metroplex. She gives voice to the residents -- for the most part educated, middle class, and politically conservative -- who became reluctant anti-drilling activists in response to perceived environmental and health threats posed by fracking. --Publisher
- Anguelovski, Isabelle, author.
- Cambridge, Massachusetts : The MIT Press, [2014]
- Description
- Book — 1 online resource (xiii, 276 pages) : illustrations, maps
- Summary
-
Environmental justice as studied in a variety of disciplines is most often associated with redressing disproportionate exposure to pollution, contimination, and toxic sites. In this book, Isabelle Anguelovski takes a broader view of environmental justice, examining wide-ranging comprehensive efforts at neighbourhood environmental revitalization that include parks, urban agriculture, fresh food markets, playgrounds, housing, and waste management
"Environmental justice as studied in a variety of disciplines is most often associated with redressing disproportionate exposure to pollution, contamination, and toxic sites. In Neighborhood as Refuge, Isabelle Anguelovski takes a broader view of environmental justice, examining wide-ranging comprehensive efforts at neighborhood environmental revitalization that include parks, urban agriculture, fresh food markets, playgrounds, housing, and waste management. She investigates and compares three minority, low-income neighborhoods that organized to improve environmental quality and livability: Casc Antic, in Barcelona; Dudley, in the Roxbury section of Boston; and Cayo Hueso, in Havana. Despite the differing histories and political contexts of these three communities, Anguelovski finds similar patterns of activism. She shows that behind successful revitalization efforts is what she calls "bottom to bottom" networking, powered by broad coalitions of residents, community organizations, architects, artists, funders, political leaders, and at times environmental advocacy groups. Anguelovski also describes how, overtime, environmental projects provide psychological benefits, serving as a way to heal a marginalized and environmentally traumatized urban neighborhood. They encourage a sense of rootedness and of attachment to place, creating safe havens that offer residents a space for recovery. They also help to bolster residents' ability to deal with the negative dynamics of discrimination and provide spaces for broader political struggles including gentrification. Drawing on the cases of Barcelona, Boston, and Havana, Anguelovski presents a new holistic framework for understanding environmental justice action in cities, with the right to a healthy community environment at its core."--Provided by publisher
20. Sustainable urban metabolism [2013]
- Ferrão, Paulo, 1962- author.
- Cambridge, Massachusetts : The MIT Press, [2013]
- Description
- Book — 1 online resource (xiii, 244 pages) : illustrations
- Summary
-
Urbanization and globalization have shaped the last hundred years. These two dominant trends are mutually reinforcing: globalization links countries through the networked communications of urban hubs. The urban population now generates more than eighty percent of global GDP. Cities account for enormous flows of energy and materials -- inflows of goods and services and outflows of waste. Thus urban environmental management critically affects global sustainability. In this book, Paulo Ferrao and John Fernandez offer a metabolic perspective on urban sustainability, viewing the city as a metabolism, in terms of its exchanges of matter and energy. Their book provides a roadmap to the strategies and tools needed for a scientifically based framework for analyzing and promoting the sustainability of urban systems. Using the concept of urban metabolism as a unifying framework, Ferrao and Fernandez describe a systems-oriented approach that establishes useful linkages among environmental, economic, social, and technical infrastructure issues. These linkages lead to an integrated information-intensive platform that enables ecologically informed urban planning. After establishing the theoretical background and describing the diversity of contributing disciplines, the authors sample sustainability approaches and tools, offer an extended study of the urban metabolism of Lisbon, and outline the challenges and opportunities in approaching urban sustainability in both developed and developing countries.
(source: Nielsen Book Data)