Design Meets Science in a Changing Climate: A Case for Regional Thinking to Address Urban Coastal Resilience

As countries and cities struggle with the complexities of sea-level rise and climate change, and as the built environment professions struggle with field conditions that necessitate transdisciplinary management, the academic institutions have developed pedagogical approaches and are increasingly ree...

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Veröffentlicht in:Social research 2015-09, Vol.82 (3), p.839-857
Hauptverfasser: Weisz, Claire, Blumberg, Alan F., Keenan, Jesse M.
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container_title Social research
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creator Weisz, Claire
Blumberg, Alan F.
Keenan, Jesse M.
description As countries and cities struggle with the complexities of sea-level rise and climate change, and as the built environment professions struggle with field conditions that necessitate transdisciplinary management, the academic institutions have developed pedagogical approaches and are increasingly reengaging the idea that innovation can be facilitated within linear, rule-bound systems. Through a codification of criteria that defy optimization, the default programmatic and form biases of the designer are manipulated by a collective interpretation of sociopolitical relationships, market behaviors, and constitutional and scientific laws. The increased recognition of the limitations of professional acculturation of the objective public obligation is balanced by subjective realities of professional ethics and intra-organizational dynamics, which serve ostensibly the same outcome despite different and often frictional trajectories. One significant dimension of the application of this model is to question the notions of aesthetics in the face of efficiency-seeking production and replication whose applications on a regional scale defy any historical precedent beyond perhaps that of the Great Wall of China.
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source EBSCOhost Political Science Complete; Worldwide Political Science Abstracts; Business Source Complete; JSTOR; Sociological Abstracts
subjects Acculturation
Aesthetics
Alternative energy
Built environment
Cities
Climate change
Coasts
Criteria
Efficiency
Emergency preparedness
Ethics
Floods
Hypotheses
Management
Obligations
Occupations
Ocean currents
Part V. Difficult Choices
Production
Professional ethics
Professions
Renewable resources
Reproducibility
Resilience
Scientists
Sea level
Shoreline protection
Storm damage
Teams
Tidal waves
Urban areas
Urban planning
Wind
Wind farms
title Design Meets Science in a Changing Climate: A Case for Regional Thinking to Address Urban Coastal Resilience
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