Rapidly Changing Cities: Working with Socio-Ecological Systems to Facilitate Transformation

Cities across the world are changing rapidly. Driven by population growth, migration, economic decline in rural areas, political instabilities, and even more recently, the Covid-19 pandemic, urban systems and spaces are changing to accommodate moving people and new functions. In many cases, these tr...

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Main Author: Karina Landman
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Cogitatio 2021-05-01
Series:Urban Planning
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.cogitatiopress.com/urbanplanning/article/view/4472
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spelling doaj-0b869ab93abe4d7d8b4b2ad6c9795f6b2021-05-25T10:04:52ZengCogitatioUrban Planning2183-76352021-05-016210.17645/up.v6i2.44721987Rapidly Changing Cities: Working with Socio-Ecological Systems to Facilitate TransformationKarina Landman0Department of Town and Regional Planning, University of Pretoria, South AfricaCities across the world are changing rapidly. Driven by population growth, migration, economic decline in rural areas, political instabilities, and even more recently, the Covid-19 pandemic, urban systems and spaces are changing to accommodate moving people and new functions. In many cases, these trends contribute to increased levels of inequality, poverty, food insecurity, and unemployment, while the warnings about the impact of climate change continue to raise concerns. Though some have called this a new urban revolution, others have referred to, in a more apocalyptic turn, the end of cities. In response, many writers are encouraging smarter cities, whereas others are promoting a post-urban context and a return to small communities. High levels of uncertainty are characteristic, along with increased intensities of complexity, rapid fluctuation and unbounded experimentation. This raises many questions about the nature and implication of change in different cities situated in vastly contrasting contexts. This thematic issue of Urban Planning focuses on five narratives from cities across the world to illustrate various drivers of change and their implications for urban design and planning. The editorial introduces these narratives, as well as commentaries from leading academics/practitioners and highlights several divergent experiences and common threats. It argues that to deal with the rapid and often large-scale changes, planners need to view human settlements as socio-ecological systems and plan for change and uncertainty to facilitate the co-evolution of humans and nature.https://www.cogitatiopress.com/urbanplanning/article/view/4472complexityrapidly changing citiessocio-ecological systemssustainable developmenturbanisation
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Karina Landman
spellingShingle Karina Landman
Rapidly Changing Cities: Working with Socio-Ecological Systems to Facilitate Transformation
Urban Planning
complexity
rapidly changing cities
socio-ecological systems
sustainable development
urbanisation
author_facet Karina Landman
author_sort Karina Landman
title Rapidly Changing Cities: Working with Socio-Ecological Systems to Facilitate Transformation
title_short Rapidly Changing Cities: Working with Socio-Ecological Systems to Facilitate Transformation
title_full Rapidly Changing Cities: Working with Socio-Ecological Systems to Facilitate Transformation
title_fullStr Rapidly Changing Cities: Working with Socio-Ecological Systems to Facilitate Transformation
title_full_unstemmed Rapidly Changing Cities: Working with Socio-Ecological Systems to Facilitate Transformation
title_sort rapidly changing cities: working with socio-ecological systems to facilitate transformation
publisher Cogitatio
series Urban Planning
issn 2183-7635
publishDate 2021-05-01
description Cities across the world are changing rapidly. Driven by population growth, migration, economic decline in rural areas, political instabilities, and even more recently, the Covid-19 pandemic, urban systems and spaces are changing to accommodate moving people and new functions. In many cases, these trends contribute to increased levels of inequality, poverty, food insecurity, and unemployment, while the warnings about the impact of climate change continue to raise concerns. Though some have called this a new urban revolution, others have referred to, in a more apocalyptic turn, the end of cities. In response, many writers are encouraging smarter cities, whereas others are promoting a post-urban context and a return to small communities. High levels of uncertainty are characteristic, along with increased intensities of complexity, rapid fluctuation and unbounded experimentation. This raises many questions about the nature and implication of change in different cities situated in vastly contrasting contexts. This thematic issue of Urban Planning focuses on five narratives from cities across the world to illustrate various drivers of change and their implications for urban design and planning. The editorial introduces these narratives, as well as commentaries from leading academics/practitioners and highlights several divergent experiences and common threats. It argues that to deal with the rapid and often large-scale changes, planners need to view human settlements as socio-ecological systems and plan for change and uncertainty to facilitate the co-evolution of humans and nature.
topic complexity
rapidly changing cities
socio-ecological systems
sustainable development
urbanisation
url https://www.cogitatiopress.com/urbanplanning/article/view/4472
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