ABSTRACT

Urban climate change is a crossroads in two very different senses. One is historical. With the world now more than half urban, and given the ecological consequences of the world's high-consumption urban centers, we are at an ecological crossroad. We either head off the worst of ecological collapse through concerted and forward-looking action, or we face a 'Mad Max future' of dystopia, violence, and upheaval. The second crossroad is intellectual. Our individual disciplines are unable to grasp the magnitude of the economic-ecological challenges ahead. For that we need to work holistically, calling on the knowledge of climatologists, engineers, sociologists, economists, public health specialist, designers, architects, community organizers, and more. The intellectual crossroad is nothing less than a new intellectual field of Sustainable Development. Based on a major international forum held in Rome in 2008, this volume brings together leading climate change experts to engage with the climate change discourse as it shifts from mitigation to adaptation, with particular attention to the urban environment. In doing so, it provides important insights into how to deal with the first crossroad, by achieving the second. It represents a new generation of thinking involving not only science, but the broad array of fields that must be called upon to effectively address the global climate crisis: from ecological science to political science; from economics to philosophy to architecture; and from public health to public art. It is a pioneering effort to broaden the discursive field, and is likely to remain a landmark study on the subject for a generation.

chapter 1|10 pages

The Design Equation

chapter 2|6 pages

The Question of Environmental Justice

chapter 3|12 pages

Five Health Concerns

chapter 4|10 pages

Cities and Governance

chapter 5|10 pages

Taking Action

chapter 6|8 pages

The Adaptation Imperative

chapter 7|8 pages

Urban Competitiveness

chapter 8|12 pages

What If. . . New York

chapter 9|8 pages

Toponymical Rome

chapter 10|8 pages

Communicating the Safe City

chapter 11|10 pages

Real People, Urban Places

chapter 12|8 pages

Governance and Consensus Building

chapter 13|6 pages

The Mad Max Phase

chapter 14|6 pages

The Sociology of Disaster

chapter 15|6 pages

The Antarctica Project

chapter 16|6 pages

A Vicious Circle

chapter 17|6 pages

Uncertainties

chapter 18|8 pages

Out of Alternative Explanations