Societal premises for sustainable development in large southern cities [An article from: Global Environmental Change]
Book Details
Author(s)S. Myllyla, K. Kuvaja
PublisherElsevier
ISBN / ASINB000RR5WWM
ISBN-13978B000RR5WW7
MarketplaceFrance 🇫🇷
Description
This digital document is a journal article from Global Environmental Change, published by Elsevier in . The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Media Library immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.
Description:
This article examines considerations related to the societal premises of a 'sustainable city' in the context of large southern cities. The article also reviews some alternative concepts to 'sustainable city' such as 'eco-city' and 'ecological city' and examines their suitability in the South. The article proposes that the greatest challenge of environmental urban development in the South is not necessarily the lack of environmental services and infrastructure, but the societal structures reproducing unequal distribution and malfunctioning of these services. The authors' empirical evidence and personal experience from Lagos, New Delhi, Cairo and Manila is presented to elaborate the argument. The article calls for locally defined 'sustainable city' models that consider local societal and cultural resources and constraints along with environmental improvements. In this process, sustainability is not regarded as a goal, but as a criterion for motivated and transparent administration as well as efficient, flexible and equal service provision and resource allocation.
Description:
This article examines considerations related to the societal premises of a 'sustainable city' in the context of large southern cities. The article also reviews some alternative concepts to 'sustainable city' such as 'eco-city' and 'ecological city' and examines their suitability in the South. The article proposes that the greatest challenge of environmental urban development in the South is not necessarily the lack of environmental services and infrastructure, but the societal structures reproducing unequal distribution and malfunctioning of these services. The authors' empirical evidence and personal experience from Lagos, New Delhi, Cairo and Manila is presented to elaborate the argument. The article calls for locally defined 'sustainable city' models that consider local societal and cultural resources and constraints along with environmental improvements. In this process, sustainability is not regarded as a goal, but as a criterion for motivated and transparent administration as well as efficient, flexible and equal service provision and resource allocation.
