ABSTRACT

Since the 1990s ‘beliefs’, ‘ideas’ or ‘knowledge’ as well as processes of communicative interactions such as persuasion, argumentation and learning have received increasing attention in social science for the understanding of political changes. This book makes a significant contribution to this scholarly debate and will be of interest to practitioners, showing on one side how climate change has received more and more attention in policy making at the local level and changed the urban agenda and on the other how different the responses of cities to this global challenge are – and how these differences between cities can be explained. This book was previously published as a special issue of Urban Research and Practice.

chapter 3|1 pages

Perspectives

chapter |2 pages

Notes

chapter 5|1 pages

Conclusion

chapter |2 pages

Disclosure statement

chapter |4 pages

References

chapter 3|2 pages

Situated knowledge orders

chapter 5|1 pages

Interpretation of results

chapter |1 pages

Acknowledgement

chapter |3 pages

Disclosure statement

chapter 2|2 pages

Local knowledge orders

chapter 5|1 pages

Conclusion

chapter |1 pages

Acknowledgement

chapter |2 pages

Notes

chapter 2|1 pages

Knowledge orders in decision-making

chapter 3|1 pages

Research design and methodology

chapter 4|8 pages

Comparative case studies

chapter 5|2 pages

Discussion of the findings

chapter 6|1 pages

Conclusions and further research

chapter |3 pages

References

chapter 8|1 pages

Conclusions

chapter |3 pages

Acknowledgments