Turning Up the Heat: Urban Political Ecology for a Climate Emergency
Turning Up the Heat: Urban Political Ecology for a Climate Emergency
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Abstract
Urban political ecology (UPE) has been conceptually influential and empirically robust, however the field has mainly focused on the way cities are metabolically linked and networked with resource flows and ecological processes. Currently, in the face of climate change challenges, scholars working on UPE are taking the field in new directions: from expanding the field of enquiry to include more than human actors, to shifting the geographical focus to overlooked peripheries, the Global South or the suburbs. Although cities are framed by the New Urban Agenda, adopted by the UN Habitat 2016, as central actors, the very ontological status of cities is also questioned, with important implications for UPE. We argue that in order to answer these emerging questions we need renewed, qualified, conceptually robust and empirically substantiated research that does not come from already privileged vintage points or geographical locations. This book launches an inquiry into a UPE better informed by situated knowledges; an embodied UPE, that puts equal attention to the role of more than -human ontologies and processes of capital accumulation. The book aims to extend UPE analysis to new places and perspectives. As discussions regarding the environment are now dominated by policy makers, planners and politicians, it is more crucial than ever, we argue to maintain a critical engagement with mainstream policy and academic debates.
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Front Matter
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Introduction: Urban political ecology for a climate emergency
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Part I Extended urbanisation: Moving UPE beyond the ‘urbanisation of nature’ thesis
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1
Capital’s natures: A critique of (urban) political ecology1
Erik Swyngedouw
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2
Urban political ecology versus ecological urbanism
Matthew Gandy
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3
Towards the urban-natural: Notes on urban utopias from the decolonial turn
Roberto Luís Monte-Mór andEster Limonad
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4
Circuits of extraction and the metabolism of urbanisation1
Martín Arboleda
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5
Hinterlands of the Capitalocene1
Neil Brenner andNikos Katsikis
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1
Capital’s natures: A critique of (urban) political ecology1
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Part II Situated urban political ecologies
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6
The case for reparations, urban political ecology, and the Black right to urban life
Nik Heynen andNikki Luke
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7
Urban climate change and feminist political ecology
Andrea J. Nightingale
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8
Nairobi’s bad natures
Wangui Kimari
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9
Situating suburban ecologies in the Global South: Notes from India’s urban periphery1
Shubhra Gururani
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10
Infrastructure beyond the modern ideal: Thinking through heterogeneity, serendipity, and autonomy in African cities
Mary Lawhon and others
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6
The case for reparations, urban political ecology, and the Black right to urban life
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Part III More-than-human urban political ecologies and relational geographies
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11
Extending the boundaries of ‘urban society’: The urban political ecologies and pathologies of Ebola virus disease in West Africa
Roger Keil and others
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12
In formation: Urban political ecology for a world of flows
Kian Goh
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13
Insurgent earth: Territorialist political ecology in/for the new climate regime
Camilla Perrone
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11
Extending the boundaries of ‘urban society’: The urban political ecologies and pathologies of Ebola virus disease in West Africa
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Part IV Addressing disjunctions between policy, politics, and academic debate
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14
Populist political ecologies? Urban political ecology, authoritarian populism, and the suburbs
Alex Loftus andJoris Gort
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15
Greenwashing and greywashing: New ideologies of nature in urban sustainability policy
David Wachsmuth andHillary Angelo
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16
The peasant way or the urban way? Why disidentification matters for emancipatory politics
Irina Velicu
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17
Urbanising islands: A critical history of Singapore’s offshore islands
Creighton Connolly andHamzah Muzaini
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18
The circular economy of cities: The good, the bad, and the ugly
Federico Savini
- Epilogue: Is an integrated UPE research and policy agenda possible?
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14
Populist political ecologies? Urban political ecology, authoritarian populism, and the suburbs
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End Matter
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