ABSTRACT

Rethinking Urban Transitions provides critical insight for societal and policy debates about the potential and limits of low carbon urbanism. It draws on over a decade of international research, undertaken by scholars across multiple disciplines concerned with analysing and shaping urban sustainability transitions. It seeks to open up the possibility of a new generation of urban low carbon transition research, which foregrounds the importance of political, geographical and developmental context in shaping the possibilities for a low carbon urban future.

The book’s contributions propose an interpretation of urban low carbon transitions as primarily social, political and developmental processes. Rather than being primarily technical efforts aimed at measuring and mitigating greenhouse gases, the low carbon transition requires a shift in the mode and politics of urban development. The book argues that moving towards this model requires rethinking what it means to design, practise and mobilize low carbon in the city, while also acknowledging the presence of multiple and contested developmental pathways. Key to this shift is thinking about transitions, not solely as technical, infrastructural or systemic shifts, but also as a way of thinking about collective futures, societal development and governing modes – a recognition of the political and contested nature of low carbon urbanism. The various contributions provide novel conceptual frameworks as well as empirically rich cases through which we can begin to interrogate the relevance of socio-economic, political and developmental dimensions in the making or unmaking of low carbon in the city. The book draws on a diverse range of examples (including ‘world cities’ and ‘ordinary cities’) from North America, South America, Europe, Australia, Africa, India and China, to provide evidence that expectations, aspirations and plans to undertake purposive socio-technical transitions are both emerging and encountering resistance in different urban contexts.

Rethinking Urban Transitions is an essential text for courses concerned with cities, climate change and environmental issues in sociology, politics, urban studies, planning, environmental studies, geography and the built environment.

chapter 2|24 pages

Rethinking urban transitions

An analytical framework

part I|71 pages

Technologies, materialities, infrastructures

chapter 3|17 pages

Seeking effective infrastructures of decarbonization in Paris

Material politics of socio-technical change

chapter 4|18 pages

Legacies of energy autarky for low carbon urban transitions

A comparison of Berlin and Hong Kong

chapter 5|16 pages

The amenable city-region

The symbolic rise and the relative decline of Greater Manchester’s low carbon commitments, 2006–17

chapter 6|19 pages

What is ‘carbon neutral’?

Planning urban deep decarbonization in North America

part II|74 pages

Intermediation and governance

chapter 7|20 pages

Reconfiguring spatial boundaries and institutional practices

Mobilizing and sustaining urban low carbon transitions in Victoria, Australia

chapter 8|17 pages

Strong local government moving to the market?

The case of low carbon futures in the city of Örebro, Sweden

chapter 10|18 pages

Localizing environmental governance in India

Mapping urban institutional structures

part III|67 pages

Communities and subjectivities

chapter 11|20 pages

Governing carbon conduct and subjects

Insights from Australian cities

chapter 12|21 pages

Cultural conflicts and decarbonization pathways

Urban intensification politics as a site of contestation in Ottawa

chapter 13|18 pages

Post-development carbon