Do global pandemics disrupt or seed transformations in cities? A systematic review of evidence

Bolstered by the complex world we live in, research on transformations has deepened our understanding of pathways to sustainable, inclusive, smart and resilient cities. However, there has not been much comprehensive analysis on how pandemics shape urban societies, yet more than half of the human pop...

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Main Author: Buyana Kareem
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2021-01-01
Series:Social Sciences and Humanities Open
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2590291121000346
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spelling doaj-6c03faf553194468b424db57d95003472021-03-11T04:26:01ZengElsevierSocial Sciences and Humanities Open2590-29112021-01-0141100138Do global pandemics disrupt or seed transformations in cities? A systematic review of evidenceBuyana Kareem0Urban Action Lab, Department of Geography, Geo-informatics and Climatic Sciences, College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences, Makerere University Uganda, P.O Box, 7062, Kampala Uganda University Road, CHUSS Building, South Wing, Ground Floor, Room 12, UgandaBolstered by the complex world we live in, research on transformations has deepened our understanding of pathways to sustainable, inclusive, smart and resilient cities. However, there has not been much comprehensive analysis on how pandemics shape urban societies, yet more than half of the human population now lives in cities. This paper attests to the question of whether pandemics disrupt or seed transformations in cities. The paper draws on a qualitative systematic review of academic literature, using Black Death in the middle ages of European societies as the mark to the advent of COVID-19 in metropolitan China. The evidence reveals that drastic disease-control measures and unprecedented restrictions on urban mobility, not only interrupt stable and coherent meanings of urban life but also negate the notion of carefully planned transformations. The analysis highline is that pandemic-induced transformations often come with conundrums within economic sectors, cyber security, public health and civil liberties, which makes the semblance of disruptive transformations appear inevitable. The evidence shows that pandemics often seed transformations in cities through fluid contexts of emergent changes in governance and urban design. Although mathematical and computer simulations predominantly guide decision-making on containment and recovery from pandemics, the evidence indicates that such data accounts for only a fraction of the information needed to confront the risks faced by cities. The paper recommends that efforts around recovery and containment of pandemics, need to be rooted in a culture of transdisciplinarity, which calls for stronger contributions from and collaborations amongst different tribes of science and sectors of governments.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2590291121000346Global pandemicsCOVID-19TransformationsCitiesTransdciplinarity
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Buyana Kareem
spellingShingle Buyana Kareem
Do global pandemics disrupt or seed transformations in cities? A systematic review of evidence
Social Sciences and Humanities Open
Global pandemics
COVID-19
Transformations
Cities
Transdciplinarity
author_facet Buyana Kareem
author_sort Buyana Kareem
title Do global pandemics disrupt or seed transformations in cities? A systematic review of evidence
title_short Do global pandemics disrupt or seed transformations in cities? A systematic review of evidence
title_full Do global pandemics disrupt or seed transformations in cities? A systematic review of evidence
title_fullStr Do global pandemics disrupt or seed transformations in cities? A systematic review of evidence
title_full_unstemmed Do global pandemics disrupt or seed transformations in cities? A systematic review of evidence
title_sort do global pandemics disrupt or seed transformations in cities? a systematic review of evidence
publisher Elsevier
series Social Sciences and Humanities Open
issn 2590-2911
publishDate 2021-01-01
description Bolstered by the complex world we live in, research on transformations has deepened our understanding of pathways to sustainable, inclusive, smart and resilient cities. However, there has not been much comprehensive analysis on how pandemics shape urban societies, yet more than half of the human population now lives in cities. This paper attests to the question of whether pandemics disrupt or seed transformations in cities. The paper draws on a qualitative systematic review of academic literature, using Black Death in the middle ages of European societies as the mark to the advent of COVID-19 in metropolitan China. The evidence reveals that drastic disease-control measures and unprecedented restrictions on urban mobility, not only interrupt stable and coherent meanings of urban life but also negate the notion of carefully planned transformations. The analysis highline is that pandemic-induced transformations often come with conundrums within economic sectors, cyber security, public health and civil liberties, which makes the semblance of disruptive transformations appear inevitable. The evidence shows that pandemics often seed transformations in cities through fluid contexts of emergent changes in governance and urban design. Although mathematical and computer simulations predominantly guide decision-making on containment and recovery from pandemics, the evidence indicates that such data accounts for only a fraction of the information needed to confront the risks faced by cities. The paper recommends that efforts around recovery and containment of pandemics, need to be rooted in a culture of transdisciplinarity, which calls for stronger contributions from and collaborations amongst different tribes of science and sectors of governments.
topic Global pandemics
COVID-19
Transformations
Cities
Transdciplinarity
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2590291121000346
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