Cover image for Cities, Nature and Development : The Politics and Production of Urban Vulnerabilities.
Cities, Nature and Development : The Politics and Production of Urban Vulnerabilities.
Title:
Cities, Nature and Development : The Politics and Production of Urban Vulnerabilities.
Author:
Dooling, Sarah.
ISBN:
9781409408321
Personal Author:
Physical Description:
1 online resource (229 pages)
Contents:
Cover -- Contents -- List of Figures -- List of Tables -- Acknowledgments -- List of Contributors -- Part 1: Geographies of Wealth and Risk Accumulation: Neoliberal Policy and Resource Instrumentalism -- 1 Cities, Nature and Development -- 2 Development, Risk Momentum and the Ecology of Vulnerability -- 3 The Neoliberal Production of Vulnerability and Unequal Risk -- 4 The Production of Urban Vulnerability Through Market-based Parks Governance -- Part 2: Unanticipated Vulnerabilities: Sustainability Planning, Environmental Movements, and Activism -- 5 Re-imagining the Local: Scale, Race, Culture and the Production of Food Vulnerabilities -- 6 Sustainability Planning, Ecological Gentrification and the Production of Urban Vulnerabilities -- 7 Between Here and There: Mobilizing Urban Vulnerabilities in Climate Camps and Transition Towns. -- Part 3: Vulnerabilities in the Urbanizing Context: Cultural and Demographic Transformations -- 8 Co-opting Restoration: Women, Voluntarism, and Insurgent Performance in Philadelphia -- 9 Rust-to-resilience: Local Responses to Urban Vulnerabilities in Utica, New York -- 10The Privilege of Staying Dry -- Epilogue -- Index.
Abstract:
Bringing together an interdisciplinary team of scholars, this book illustrates how and why cities are comprised by a mosaic of vulnerable human and ecological communities. Case studies ranging across various international settings reveal how 'urban vulnerabilities' is an effective metaphor and analytic lens for advancing political ecological theories on the relationships between cities, nature and development. Contributions expand upon conceptions of vulnerability as a static condition and instead present vulnerability as a phenomenon that is produced through complex and contentious planning histories, and which may, in turn, be politicized, exploited and-in some instances-contested. Expanding upon snapshot vulnerability assessments, this volume articulates vulnerability as a process that is marked by the accumulation of risk over time and the transference of risk across space and populations. Moving beyond notions of vulnerability as a singular, case studies demonstrate that social and ecological vulnerabilities are deeply integrated and, as such, are irreducible to one or the other. This volume also highlights how the production of vulnerabilities is frequently achieved through integrated and mutually reinforcing economic development and environmentally driven agendas. This collection thus suggests that vulnerability-and also forms of resilience-are implicated in efforts to plan for and manage sustainable cities. This book provides timely and provocative perspectives on a wide range of urban issues including: park management, gentrification, suburban expansion, sustainability planning, local organic food systems, hazards management, climate change activism and north-south flows of urban environmental externalities. Collectively, these works reveal the complexities of urban vulnerabilities-related to scalar interactions, accumulation and

transfer of risk, politicization and governance, and capacity for resistance-and in doing so, provide readers with coherent, robust and well-theorized analysis of the politics and production of urban vulnerabilities.
Local Note:
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2017. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.
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