Reshaping Urban Infrastructure

Summary Urban policy makers and researchers consistently recognize the challenge of more effectively reshaping the linkages between cities, urban infrastructure, ecosystem services, and natural resources. The aim of this article is to consider the potential value of developing connections between tw...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of industrial ecology 2012-12, Vol.16 (6), p.789-800
Hauptverfasser: Hodson, Mike, Marvin, Simon, Robinson, Blake, Swilling, Mark
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container_issue 6
container_start_page 789
container_title Journal of industrial ecology
container_volume 16
creator Hodson, Mike
Marvin, Simon
Robinson, Blake
Swilling, Mark
description Summary Urban policy makers and researchers consistently recognize the challenge of more effectively reshaping the linkages between cities, urban infrastructure, ecosystem services, and natural resources. The aim of this article is to consider the potential value of developing connections between two currently disconnected approaches to resource use and cities—material flow analysis (MFA) and transitions analysis (TA). This article attempts to address this deficit and looks critically at resource flows through cities and the infrastructures that have been—or could be—reconfigured to more effectively manage these flows from the perspectives of MFA and TA. This is an issue that has not been addressed, with the result that inadequate attention has been paid to the reconfiguring of urban infrastructures whose construction and maintenance are, in turn, often the largest expenditures at the city government level. Insufficient attention has been given to the fact that the design, construction, and operation of infrastructures (specifically energy, waste, water, sanitation, and transport infrastructures) create a sociotechnical environment that plays an important role in shaping, and potentially reshaping, how resources are procured, used, and disposed of by the city. The challenge, of course, is how such a transition takes place, who leads it and what social and governance processes are best suited to facilitate such city transitions. This article assesses the role of MFA and TA in understanding these resource flows and urban infrastructures, making it possible to begin to tackle this challenge in practical transformative ways.
doi_str_mv 10.1111/j.1530-9290.2012.00559.x
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source Wiley Online Library Journals Frontfile Complete; PAIS Index
subjects Appropriations and expenditures
Cities
Ecosystems
Environment
Environmental management
Government and politics
industrial ecology
Infrastructure
Local government
metabolism
Natural resource management
Natural resources
Sanitation
Studies
technological
Urban areas
Urban policy
urbanism
Water
title Reshaping Urban Infrastructure
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