Academic literature on the topic 'Governmentality ecological sustainable city'

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Journal articles on the topic "Governmentality ecological sustainable city"

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Song, Yijun. "Ecological City and Urban Sustainable Development." Procedia Engineering 21 (2011): 142–46. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.proeng.2011.11.1997.

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Dou, Xiangsheng, Shasha Li, and Jing Wang. "Ecological Strategy of City Sustainable Development." APCBEE Procedia 5 (2013): 429–34. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.apcbee.2013.05.074.

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Mottaeva, Angela, Natalya Kalinina, Anna Kuzmina, Olga Olenina, and Aznaur Glashev. "Ecological aspects of modern city-planning." E3S Web of Conferences 91 (2019): 08072. http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/e3sconf/20199108072.

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Directions for creation of a steady eco-city (or an eco-district) and the criteria of stability and environmental friendliness of the cities are presented. The authors also recognize that the sustainable eco-friendly development of the city demands association of the matters of the so called “green” agenda and the “brown” agenda. On the other hand, there are places where the sharp social inequality and the interfaced social problems are presented. The authors prove that, although the economic activity of cities leads to serious environmental problems, cities have the greatest potential for developing ways of sustainable environmental development.
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Pickett, S. T. A., Christopher G. Boone, Brian P. McGrath, M. L. Cadenasso, Daniel L. Childers, Laura A. Ogden, Melissa McHale, and J. Morgan Grove. "Ecological science and transformation to the sustainable city." Cities 32 (July 2013): S10—S20. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cities.2013.02.008.

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Wang, Lu. "Discussion of our Ecological City Construction." Advanced Materials Research 962-965 (June 2014): 2425–28. http://dx.doi.org/10.4028/www.scientific.net/amr.962-965.2425.

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Ecological city construction is the only way of sustainable development, and the development direction of future city. This paper discusses the ecological city ’ s basic connotation, necessity, current situation and existing problems, then sums up the practical measures of the ecological city construction.
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Egger, Steve. "Determining a sustainable city model." Environmental Modelling & Software 21, no. 9 (September 2006): 1235–46. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.envsoft.2005.04.012.

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Kang, Yan Yan, Jia Lin Wang, and Xiao Dan Yu. "Sustainable Development Analysis of Resources Based City Based on Ecological Footprint Model: Shandong Dongying City." Advanced Materials Research 1010-1012 (August 2014): 1297–300. http://dx.doi.org/10.4028/www.scientific.net/amr.1010-1012.1297.

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Applying ecological footprint model to calculate the ecological footprint and ecological carrying capacity of Dongying ,a typical oil city between the year 2005-2009,the results showed that ecological footprint was deficit in recent years, and the trend had been exacerbated. The economic development of Dongying was in an ecologically unsustainable condition. Measures are put forward to facilitate the sustainable development in two aspects: the reduction of the ecological footprint demand such as industrial structure adjustment, low carbon industry system construction and green life pattern formation; the increase of ecological carrying capacity supply, such as rationally utilizing land and making full use of marine resources.
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Scerri, Andy, and Meg Holden. "Ecological Modernization or Sustainable Development? Vancouver'sGreenest City Action Plan: The City as ‘manager’ of Ecological Restructuring." Journal of Environmental Policy & Planning 16, no. 2 (September 12, 2013): 261–79. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/1523908x.2013.836962.

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Kudryavtseva, Olga V., Olga I. Malikova, and Egor G. Egorov. "Sustainable Urban Development And Ecological Externalities: Russian Case." GEOGRAPHY, ENVIRONMENT, SUSTAINABILITY 14, no. 1 (April 5, 2021): 81–90. http://dx.doi.org/10.24057/2071-9388-2020-151.

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Inclusive, safe, resilient and sustainable cities are included in Sustainable development Goals. The choice between environmental and social well-being is a very acute issue. It is necessary to take into account the interaction of three city dimensions: economic, ecological and social. The aim of the paper is to evaluate externalities in terms of population for 114 Russian cities all over the country considering all three dimensions.The methods are the analysis of statistical data by econometric methods and their processing including geographical visualization. The data was taken from the Federal State Statistics Service database. The main results are the followings. The methodology for evaluation of externalities and estimation a hypothetical «efficient city size» in terms of population for Russian cities has been elaborated. The access to high-paying jobs and the availability of social benefits is often associated with living or moving to cities or regions with an unfavorable environment. Some cities feature an extremely high growth rate, dense population and often a low level of management and economic development.Then there was demonstrated how to achieve a hypothetical «efficient city size» by means of environmental management and changes in city area. This should be helpful in achieving the Sustainable Development Goals (especially the Goal 11) and some targets mentioned in the «New Urban Agenda». It is essential to pay attention to the function of a city and its spatial organization. Some other measures to rise efficiency were proposed as well.
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Davidson, Mark. "Sustainable City as Fantasy." Human Geography 5, no. 2 (July 2012): 14–25. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/194277861200500202.

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There can be little doubt that our current ecological crisis is being framed through the idea of sustainability. As we plan to deal with anthropogenic climate change, we talk of becoming more sustainable. We are projecting a sustainability vision; a certain future that we desire to achieve. In this paper I offer a Lacanian interpretation of this vision, arguing that we must understand how ideas such as the “sustainable city” operate as fantasy constructs. Here I want to emphasize the particular operation of this fantasy, since it is the very form of this operation that stymies the true politicization of climate change. The paper draws on Žižek's reading of Lacan to illustrate how sustainability (as fantasy) relates to our knowledge of climate change. Two brief illustrations of the operation of sustainability as fantasy are then outlined. The first draws on recent city planning in London, UK, to show how fantasy has gentrified the traumatic elements of climate change. The second illustration draws on a brief conversation with an urban policy-maker to sketch out how transgression is a functioning part of sustainability fantasies. In conclusion the paper turns to the question of politics through a relating of Lacan's psychoanalytical cure with a politicization of economy.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Governmentality ecological sustainable city"

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Nors, Linda. "Den ekologiskt hållbara staden : en diskursanalytisk studie av styrningspraktiker i Hammarby Sjöstad." Thesis, Linköping University, Department of Thematic Studies, 2004. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:liu:diva-2523.

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This study focuses on the politics around ecological sustainable development in Sweden today, with emphasis on urban development, building and living. The starting-point for this study is the environmental adapted city district of Stockholm, Hammarby Sjöstad. The primary focus of the study is to investigate what means of control the environmental investment in Hammarby Sjöstad is expressing, and to elucidate their ideological, political and social implications. The empirical material is primarily based up on the local Hammarby Sjöstad environmental program along with qualitative in-depth interviews with citizens of this district. The study is based on critical discourse analysis

The result of this study is that the ecological investment in Hammarby Sjöstad partly constitutes a hidden exercise of power, taking shape as built-in physical measures in the dwellings and the neighbouring surroundings. Hidden means of control transform political and ideological environmental targets in to practical factual matters. Hidden means of control makes ideological and political environmental issues non-political and reduces them in to technical issues.

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Durant, Valerie A. "Sustainable urban agriculture and forestation : the edible connected city." Diss., University of Pretoria, 2012. http://hdl.handle.net/2263/26246.

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Current global agricultural practices are recognized as unsustainable. The increase in overall human population as well as the global trend of rural to urban migration, partially as a result of historically and continual unsustainable agricultural practices, exacerbates the vicious cycle of poverty and hunger in developing countries. Furthermore, cities and regions in developed countries practice unsustainable food production, distribution and consumption patterns, and as a result, exceed their global ecological footprint (Rees 2009). Consequently, the world is facing a global food (FAO 2009) and water crisis (UN Sick Water 2010). Cities and Regions must learn to feed themselves to address local food insecurity as well as protect from the climate effects of increased urbanization, including the Urban Heat Island effect (UHIe) by optimizing and fully integrating the local ecosystem services of food, water and forest within a tightly woven compact urban form through the implementation of strategic urban and regional food system planning. Cities can mitigate climate change and reduce the UHIe, by implementing sustainable intensive urban agriculture approaches through policy and zoning interventions that include concepts such as intensively productive urban agriculture that includes green roofs, vertical farming and greenways as continuously productive and edible urban landscapes, referred to in this paper as continuously productive urban agriculture and forestation (CPUAF) in the private and public realm. A highly participative, adaptive systems approach is explored as the key to sustainability within an economic world order that included corporate social responsibility and social enterprise as the foundation for the integration of multiple synergies. An increasing body of evidence often links urban forestation with urban greenery initiatives, as a carbon sink to reduce UHI effects, to reduce GHG emissions and as a tool for urban beautification and place making (ISDR: 2009,109). Urban agriculture, through the production of local food is increasingly recognized as a means to reduce fossil fuel emissions by reducing transportation and production outputs, to provide a secure local food source, enhance biodiversity and educate the public regarding food source while fostering a sense of community, environmental awareness and stewardship. This thesis explores the links between intensive urban agriculture and forestation, and the relationship between climate change, and the UHI’s as an adaptation and mitigation process in global cities, implemented as a interconnected, integrated, holistic urban management approach that has a further benefit of providing food security and a sustainable and local urban food source.
Dissertation (MTRP)--University of Pretoria, 2012.
Town and Regional Planning
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Grierson, David. "Ecology, sustainability and the city : towards an ecological approach to environmental sustainability with a case study on Arconsanti in Arizona." Thesis, University of Strathclyde, 2000. http://oleg.lib.strath.ac.uk:80/R/?func=dbin-jump-full&object_id=23745.

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As the world population moves toward 10 billion people over the next 50 years environmental decline seems inevitable unless changes are implemented. Issues of ecology, sustainability and the city are now being recognised as critical. The systemic and holistic nature of the problem means that sustainable policies must address a wide range of social issues, political attitudes, economic practices and technological methods. Volume One offers a wide-ranging and comprehensive review of Environmental Problems and Sustainability and seeks to map out both the historical and contemporary basis for a widespread transition towards a more sustainable society. The world's cities now offer the critical context within which sustainable strategies can be developed and tested. Much current academic and policy literature describes a range of sustainable development models representing radically different views of how the processes leading towards the planning and implementation of cities needs to b e realised. Volume Two describes Paolo Soleri's Arcology Model and the Arcosanti Laboratory as a relevant methodology and case study. The arcology model attempts to address issues of sustainability by advocating a balanced relationship between urban morphology and performance within cities designed to conform to the complexity - miniaturization - duration (CMD) paradigm. The methodology recognises the need for the radical reorganisation of urban sprawl into dense, integrated compact urban structures in which material recycling, waste reduction and the use of renewable energy sources are part of a sustainable strategy aimed at reducing the flow of resources and products through the urban system. As governments, eager to deliver major environmental improvements, press on with, as yet, untried and untested 'centrist' urban policies, there is a need to research relevant models of compaction. Over the last ten years, as the criteria of urban sustainability have become more widely accepted and understood the relevance of the Soleri's model has become clearer. Arcosanti in Arizona, begun in 1970, offers a laboratory for testing the validity of the theory. Volume Two concludes by critically reviewing arcology and Arcosanti in the context of the discourse on sustainability offered in Volume One. Since the energy crisis of the mid-1970s efforts at Arcosanti have been directed toward the definition and testing of various architectural effects that, when combined, could offer a response to many of today's environmental problems. But today progress is painstakingly slow. Lacking the level of funding and resources that would enable it to be convincing, it now represents not so much a specific prototypical solution but an activist engaged strategy that advocates the possibility of building our dreams and visions. In a world plagued by so many problems, and so few alternatives, it continues to offer a beacon of hope for a sustainable future.
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Kumar, Arvind School of the Built Environment UNSW. "Towards an integrated sustainability assessment of the built environment : the convergence of ecological footprint and spatial analysis to map the urban dynamics of a city." Awarded by:University of New South Wales. School of the Built Environment, 2006. http://handle.unsw.edu.au/1959.4/26124.

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This research examines ways to assess the built environment (BE) for its impacts on the ecosystems and its sustainability in terms of social, economic and environmental aspects on an urban scale. The examination is based on the argument, acknowledged in the literature, that urbanisation is one of the leading causes of unsustainable development, and that the BE makes a significant contribution to this. In order to accomplish this, urban dynamics are identified and mapped with respect to the built environment, and the relationship between urbanisation, the built environment, and the ecosystem is closely examined. The thesis argues that the common denominator in all efforts to move closer to sustainability is an effective assessment method, which not only quantifies the impacts but also informs and educates. The current methods used for assessment of the impacts of BE are found to be inadequate. An appraisal of contemporary assessment methods addressing sustainability and environmental issues at micro (individual building) and macro (urban system) levels is conducted to understand the mechanics of assessment theories. Based on this, a framework for a new assessment system which has the potential to overcome some of the observed weaknesses of the existing ones is proposed. Using multi-criteria analysis principles, this system uses ecological footprint and spatial analysis as its operational engine. It is then applied to a part of the Sydney Central Business District (CBD) for an integrated sustainability assessment. The ecological footprint of the building stock, transport, roads, waste disposal and water supply is calculated as a measure of the environmental impact of the built environment. In addition to this, ???return on investment??? (rental return on construction costs) as a measure of the economic aspect, embodied energy as a measure of material consumption, and ???proximity to facilities??? as a measure of the social benefit of the building stock, are calculated to assess the study area performance on these aspects. These are used to compute an integrated sustainability index for the study area. Various attributes of the built environment, such as total constructed area, height of building, road density etc., are analysed against the ecological footprint to understand the patterns of relationships between urban morphology and the state of sustainability.
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Lau, Yuen-yee Judy, and 劉婉儀. "The city paradox: to integrate informal settlement community into urban context with sustainable landscapeintervention." Thesis, The University of Hong Kong (Pokfulam, Hong Kong), 2011. http://hub.hku.hk/bib/B47543851.

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Shih, Wan-Yu. "Optimising urban green networks in Taipei City : linking ecological and social functions in urban green space systems." Thesis, University of Manchester, 2010. https://www.research.manchester.ac.uk/portal/en/theses/optimising-urban-green-networks-in-taipei-city-linking-ecological-and-socal-functions-in-urban-green-space-systems(eca36d35-4470-4fdf-a766-ba9eebe5ca63).html.

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With the global population becoming more urban and less rural, increasingly research has argued for concepts such as establish Green Infrastructure (GI) as a tool for enhancing wildlife survival and human’s living quality (e.g. Harrison et al., 1995; Benedict and McMahon, 2006). However, an interdisciplinary planning approach underpinned by ecological and social evidence has not yet been fully developed. This research therefore seeks to integrate an ecological network with a green space planning standard by exploring the use of biotope and sociotope mapping methods. Seeking a comprehensive planning that takes all green resources into account, a green space typology is firstly developed according to Taiwanese contexts for identifying green spaces from land use maps. In order to specify effective features of these green spaces to bird survival and user preferences, an insight was conducted into the relationship of ‘birds and urban habitats’, as well as ‘human preferred urban green spaces’ in Taipei City. Important environmental factors influencing bird distribution and influencing human experiences in urban green spaces are respectively specified and developed into an ecological value index (EVI) to detail potential habitats and a social value index (SVI) to evaluate recreational green space provision. Interestingly, proximity to green space appears to plays a more critical role in human preferences than bird survival in Taipei city; size is important both as a habitat and for creating an attractive green space; and green space quality tends to be a more significant factor than its structure for both wildlife and people. Utilising the bio-sociotope maps, this thesis argues for a number of strategies: conserving, enlarging, or creating large green spaces in green space deficient areas; increasing ecological and recreational value by enhancing green space quality of specific characteristics; and tackling gravity distance by combining green space accessibility and attractiveness in optimising urban green structure. As these suggestions are a challenge to apply in intensively developed urban areas, barriers from land use, political mechanisms, technical shortages, and cultural characteristics are also explored with possible resolutions presented for facilitating implementation. It is clear that optimising a multifunctional GI for both wildlife and people requires interdisciplinary knowledge and cooperation from various fields. The EVI and SVI developed within this thesis create the potential for a more place-specific and quantifiable green spaces strategy to help better link ecological and social functions in urban areas.
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Lilja, Ellen. "The role of nature-based solutions for ecological urban planning in the sustainable city : How is the Green Space Factor system presented in urban planning strategies?" Thesis, Malmö universitet, Malmö högskola, Institutionen för Urbana Studier (US), 2021. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:mau:diva-43614.

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The thesis covers the role of the Green Space Factor (GSF) system as a nature-based solution for ecological urban planning in the sustainable city. One main focus for sustainable urban development is the aspect of constructing green spaces and green buildings in order to improve land-use efficiencies and thus minimize negative environmental impacts. Hence, in this study research is made through conducting a qualitative municipal document analysis on how the GSF system is portrayed and implemented in urban planning strategies based on the municipalities of Malmö and Gothenburg. To limit the study, two urban areas are selected for further investigation, the Western harbour in Malmö City and the Freeport in Gothenburg City. The documents included in the study are based on three categories of developing the chosen urban areas: visions, area programs and detailed plans. From the document analysis, several categories or themes were extracted consisting of future goals and vision, actors and trademarks, visionary sustainability, climate change adaptation strategies, sustainable urban development models, green infrastructure, and lastly strategies and design principles of the Western harbour and the Freeport. The results are analysed through the theory of neoliberalised urban climate change adaptation strategies and green fix as crisis management. In order to include the local context of sustainable urban development, environmental policy localization is also included in the analysis of the results. The results from the analysis of the empirical material show that the municipalities of Malmö and Gothenburg have implemented the GSF planning system into the local context of their visions, area programs and detailed plans of both the Western harbour and the Freeport. The GSF system is included in both urban planning strategies through indirect terminologies connected to general sustainable development, such as climate change adaptation, green infrastructure and design principles showcasing the desired sustainability strategies. However, the results present the risk of market-based sustainability trademarking. The study concludes on the mark that it is important for the cities to on one hand implement the GSF system into the overall policies design, and on another hand face sustainable urban development at a variety of spatial scales in order to meet the external requirements originating in the localization of environmental policies.
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Mihlté, Isac, and Jonatan Leander. "Study of optimization of two projects in "Million Program" areas : - a sustainable point of view in a suburb to a big city and a suburb to a small town." Thesis, KTH, Byggteknik och design, 2021. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:kth:diva-302515.

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The renovation and maintenance projects in the “Million program” areas are currently ongoing in many parts of the country. As the stocks in many descriptions have similar conditions with regard to urban structure, construction technology and socio-economic situation, there is great potential for comparison. This means that different results from a renovation may be linked to other factors than the execution and choice of measures. In this thesis two different “Million program” areas have been compared, one in the suburbs of a big city and one in the suburbs of a small town (which will be referred to as ftS and fts in the report). The comparison will be evaluated from the three sustainability perspectives: social, ecologic and economic. To make these three perspektive interact is difficult but when all perspectives are considered as sustainable the “Point of Optimization” has been achieved. The projects that have been involved in this bachelor thesis are Nystad 1, which is owned by Svenska Bostäder, and Drabanten 3, which is owned by Nybro Bostad. Nystad 1 is placed in Akalla which is a suburb to the big city Stockholm and Drabanten 3 is placed in Kungshall which is a suburb to the small town Nybro. Both projects change the ventilation system to FTX, replace windows, put solar cell systems on the roof, renovate the kitchen and the bathroom and additional insulation to varying degrees. The scale of the renovation in Akalla is larger as the entire building to the core gets removed and rebuilt and a total refurbishment of the yard is also included in the project. The purpose of the report is to produce values linked to each perspective of sustainability that are comparable in both projects to evaluate the connection between the results and the placement in either ftS or fts. To produce results that are measurable within every aspect a customer survey was sent out, the reduced usage of energy were calculated and the economic profit was estimated. The project in Akalla is more extensive and the total cost amounts to just under 1,3 million SEK per apartment. Prior to the renovation the rent was 971 SEK/m2 which will be increased with 25% after the renovation. For Kungshall the total cost amounted to roughly 1 million per apartment and led to an increase of rent by 28% from the original rent which was 795 SEK/m2. The participation rate of the customer survey in Akalla was lower than in Kungshall which got a better result in all categories. The reduced use of energy of the project in Akalla is estimated to 32% while the project in Kungshall merly reached 21%. The use of method in this report determine that none of the projects successfully reached economic profit with their own company-specific calculation interest. However, the analysis of vulnerability shows that after 30 years Kunghall has gained a profit of 3.2 million SEK. Akalla is expected to reach sustainability from a social and ecological perspective but not from an economic perspective. In Kungshall the social and economic perspective are assessed to be sustainable while the ecological perspective is not, due to the fact that it did not reach “Klimatiniativets” goal at a reduced energy usage of 30 %. The result in this thesis concludes that the placement in either ftS or fts impacts the sustainability from the social perspective and normally also from the economic perspective, although not with the specific circumstances regarding this ftS due to Järvaavtalet. The sustainability from the ecological perspective is not connected to the placement but merely a result of choice of measures and execution. However, as the sustainable development is an interplay between the different perspectives, the result from the ecological perspective is also indirectly affected by the placement in either ftS or fts.
Renovering och underhållsprojekt i miljonprogramsområden är pågående i flera olika delar av landet. Bestånden har i många avseende liknande förutsättningar med hänseende till stadsstruktur, byggteknik och socioekonomisk situation. Det finns således stor potential för jämförelse och därför kan resultat av en renovering eventuellt kopplas till andra faktorer än utförande och val av åtgärder. I detta examensarbete jämförs två olika miljonprogramsområden, ett i förort till storstad och ett i förort till småstad, (som i rapporten benämns som ftS och fts) och utvärderas ur de tre hållbarhetsperspektiven socialt, ekologiskt och ekonomiskt. Samspelet mellan dessa tre perspektiven är i många fall svårt och när samtliga perspektiv anses som hållbara så har den så kallade “Optimeringspunkten” uppnåtts. De projekt som detta examensarbete behandlar är Nystad 1, som ägs av Svenska Bostäder, och Drabanten 3, som ägs av Nybro Bostad AB. Nystad 1 ligger i Akalla som är en förort till storstaden Stockholm och Drabanten 3 ligger i Kungshall som är en förort till småstaden Nybro. Båda projekten utför byte till FTX-system, fönsterbyte, solcellsanläggning på tak, renovering av kök och badrum och tilläggsisolering i olika omfattningar. Renoveringen i Akalla utförs i större skala, hela byggnaden görs stomren och en total upprustning av gården ingår också i projektet. Syftet med arbetet är att ta fram jämförbara värden kopplat till varje hållbarhetsaspekt för att sedan kunna avgöra om resultaten som speglas i dessa värden kan kopplas till att projektet är placerat i antingen ftS eller fts. För att ta fram mätbara resultat inom varje aspekt skickades kundundersökningar ut, energiberäkningar utfördes och nuvärdeskalkyler ställdes upp baserat på material som tillhandahållits av respektive projektledare eller inhämtats från andra källor. Renoveringen i Akalla är mer omfattande och den totala projektkostnaden uppgår till strax under 1,3 miljoner per lägenhet. Innan renoveringen uppgick hyran i 971 kr/m2 och höjdes efter renoveringen med drygt 25%. Den totala projektkostnaden i Kungshall uppgick i strax över 1 miljon per lägenhet och resulterade i en hyreshöjning på strax under 28% från den ursprungliga hyran på 795 kr/m2. Akalla hade lägre deltagandeandel på kundundersökningarna och fick sämre resultat än Kungshall i samtliga kategorier. Akalla förväntas uppnå en total energibesparing på 32% medan Kungshall enbart uppnådde 21%. Inget av projekten lyckades, enligt rapportens metod, nå företagsekonomisk lönsamhet med de företagsspecifika kalkylräntor som delgetts, dock så lyckades Kungshall generera en vinst på 3.2 miljoner efter 30 år utifrån känslighetsanalysen. Akalla bedöms nå en social- och ekologisk hållbarhet men inte en ekonomisk hållbarhet. Kungshall bedöms ha nått en social- och ekonomisk hållbarhet men utefter “Klimatiniativets” mål på en energiminskning med 30 % efter renoveringen så bedöms inte en ekologisk hållbarhet uppnås.Arbetet kommer fram till att resultatet ur det sociala perspektivet är bundet till placeringen i antingen ftS eller fts. Det ekologisk resultatet beror främst på utförande och val av åtgärder men eftersom den hållbara utvecklingen är ett samspelet mellan de olika perspektiven så påverkas även det ekologiska resultatet indirekt av placeringen i antingen ftS eller fts. Det ekonomiska resultatet bedöms i normalfallet vara starkt kopplat till placeringen i antingen ftS eller fts. I detta specifika fall har placeringen i ftS eller fts inte en avgörande roll eftersom det ekonomiska resultatet för projektet i ftS beror på involveringen i Järvaavtalet.
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Mng'ong'o, Othmar Simtali. "A Browning process : The case of Dar es Salaam city." Doctoral thesis, Stockholm, 2005. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:kth:diva-149.

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Šliauterytė, Monika. "Darnios plėtros principų įgyvendinimo indikatoriai miestų planavime." Master's thesis, Lithuanian Academic Libraries Network (LABT), 2011. http://vddb.laba.lt/obj/LT-eLABa-0001:E.02~2011~D_20110620_114409-28853.

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Didėjant urbanizacijos mastams, būtina akcentuoti darnų miestų vystymąsi. Dažniausiai literatūroje nagrinėjami ekologiško ir kompaktiško miestų modeliai. Analizė atskleidžia, jog pagrindiniai jų principai yra mišrios paskirties žemės naudojimas, išvystytas visuomeninis transportas bei dviračių takai, didelis tankumas, viešųjų erdvių prieinamumas, gamtos resursų išsaugojimas, ekonominis, socialinis ir ekologinis stabilumas. Baigiamajame darbe nagrinėjami šie du miestų modeliai, socialiniai veiksniai bei nurodoma monitoringo svarba planuojant miesto plėtros tendencijas. Elektrėnų savivaldybės pavyzdžiu išskiriami situacijos vertinimo indikatoriai, naudojami bendrajame savivaldybės plane. Baigiamajame darbe išanalizuoti pagrindiniai principai ir išskirti pagrindiniai subalansuotos plėtros įvertinimo kriterijai, bei nustatyta, kad galima išsami miesto subalansuotumo analizė kombinuojant išskirtus kriterijus.
With increasing the scale of urbanization, it is necessary to focus on sustainable development of the city. The ecological and compact models of the city are common issue in the literature. Main principles of these models are mixed land use, good quality of public transport and opportunity for bicycling, high density, access of public spaces, and conservation of natural resources, economical, ecological and social stability. There are distinguished indicators of state evaluation of Elektrenai municipality as an example. The article examines two urban models, social factors and the importance of monitoring in the urban planning process. In the article, basic principles are analyzed and main sustainable development evaluation criteria are emphasized.
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Books on the topic "Governmentality ecological sustainable city"

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Building the ecological city. Cambridge: Woodhead, 2002.

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Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development., ed. Innovative policies for sustainable urban development: The ecological city. Paris, France: Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, 1996.

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Peck, Steven W. The ecological city: Canada's overview. [Ottawa]: Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation, 1995.

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Sheridan, Charlotte. An ecological urban design approach to greening the city. Dublin: University College Dublin, 1997.

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Archibugi, Franco. The ecological city and the city effect: Essays on the urban planning requirements for the sustainable city. Aldershot, England: Ashgate Publishing Ltd., 1997.

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consultants, Ante prima, ed. La città ecologica: Contributi per un'architettura sostenibile = The ecological city : contributions for a sustainable architecture. Cinisello Balsamo (Milano): Silvana, 2009.

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Manzini, Ezio. Sustainable everyday: Scenarios of urban life. Milan: Ambiente, 2003.

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The Almere principles: For an ecological, social and economical sustainable future of Almere 2030. Bussum: Thoth, 2008.

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Human settlements and planning for ecological sustainability: The case of Mexico City. Cambridge, Mass: MIT Press, 1998.

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Green and ecological technologies for urban planning: Creating smart cities. Hershey, PA: Information Science Reference, 2012.

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Book chapters on the topic "Governmentality ecological sustainable city"

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Frye-Levine, Laura, and Richard S. Levine. "The Coming Sustainable City." In Routledge Handbook of Ecological Economics, 497–506. Abingdon, Oxon ; New York, NY : Routledge, 2017.: Routledge, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315679747-58.

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Downton, Paul F. "Synthesis IV: The SHED Sustainable Human Ecological Development." In Future City, 491–533. Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4020-8496-6_11.

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Yu, Huan, Tiancai Zhou, Ainong Li, Guangbin Lei, and Rongxiang Du. "Landscape Changes and Ecological Effects on Dali City, Yunnan Province." In Geo-Informatics in Resource Management and Sustainable Ecosystem, 22–31. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-662-49155-3_3.

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Manabe, Tohru, Minoru Baba, Kazuaki Naito, and Keitaro Ito. "Evaluation of Habitat Functions of Fragmented Urban Forests for Wildlife: The Case of Kitakyushu City." In Urban Biodiversity and Ecological Design for Sustainable Cities, 273–91. Tokyo: Springer Japan, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-4-431-56856-8_12.

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Thaitakoo, Danai, and Brian McGrath. "The Landscape of Bangkok’s Agricultural Fringe and City Region Sustainability: An Ecological and Cultural Co-evolution." In Science for Sustainable Societies, 111–22. Tokyo: Springer Japan, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-4-431-56445-4_10.

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Moreno-Peñaranda, Raquel. "Synergies in Urban Environmental Policy: Ecosystem Services and Biodiversity Co-benefits in São Paulo City, Brazil." In Urban Biodiversity and Ecological Design for Sustainable Cities, 243–72. Tokyo: Springer Japan, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-4-431-56856-8_11.

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Wang, Xi, Xiaolei Wu, and Weixing Mao. "Construction Land Layout in Qi River Ecological District of Hebi City Based on GIS." In Geo-Informatics in Resource Management and Sustainable Ecosystem, 107–16. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-662-45737-5_11.

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Frigerio, Alessandro, and Kristen Kornienko. "Engaging the Informal and Formal in an Expanded Notion of Urban Infrastructure: How Healing Human and Ecological Networks Could Lead to a More Equitable City." In Sustainable Urban Development and Globalization, 433–48. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-61988-0_33.

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Dai, Juanjuan, Yaojian Wu, and Yurong Ouyang. "Calculations of the National Average Yield, Equivalence Factor and Yield Factor in Ten Years Based on National Hectares’ Ecological Footprint Model – A Case Study of Xiamen City." In Geo-Informatics in Resource Management and Sustainable Ecosystem, 338–49. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-662-45737-5_35.

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Sisto, Raffaele, Javier García López, Julio Lumbreras Martín, Carlos Mataix Aldeanueva, and Linos Ramos Ferreiro. "City Assessment Tool to Measure the Impact of Public Policies on Smart and Sustainable Cities. The Case Study of the Municipality of Alcobendas (Spain) Compared with Similar European Cities." In Smart and Sustainable Planning for Cities and Regions, 81–101. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-57764-3_6.

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AbstractData analytics is a key resource to analyze cities and to find their strengths and weaknesses to define long-term sustainable strategies. On the one hand, urban planning is geared to adapting cities’ strategies towards a qualitative, intelligent, and sustainable growth. On the other hand, institutions are geared towards open governance and collaborative administration models. In this context, sustainability has become a global concern for urban development, and the sustainable development goals (SDGs), defined by United Nations, are the framework to be followed to define the new city goals and to measure the advances of the policies implemented over recent years. The main objective of this research is to explain the methods and results of the application of a city assessment tool for measuring the impact of public policies on the socioeconomic and environmental structure of a city. It addresses the case study of the evaluation of the strategic plan “Diseña 2020” of the municipality of Alcobendas (Madrid, Spain, with 116.037 inhabitants), the document used to communicate the actions needed to achieve the city goals during the planning exercise. A selection of urban indicators has been aligned with the SDGs defined in the Agenda 2030 to develop a tool for the measurement of the impacts of policies in economic, social, and ecological terms. Through this set of indicators, the tool is able to quantify the impact of the policies on the city and the SDGs and to support the decision-making processes of the administration. The set of urban indicators is divided into five areas: economic development and employment, sustainable development, open government, social responsibility, and quality of life. The data evolution, across the recent years 2012–2018, is used to monitor and benchmark the effects of the applied policies. In addition, Alcobendas can be compared with other Spanish and European cities with similar characteristics; it makes possible assessing the achievement of the city’s strategic areas, incorporating the current trends and fostering the SDGs. Thanks to the quantitative comparable results and the objective approach, this research shows a methodology based on indicators that could be applied and scaled to other cities to generate a common framework for measuring the impact of public policies on cities.
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Conference papers on the topic "Governmentality ecological sustainable city"

1

Bastianoni, S., A. Galli, V. Niccolucci, and R. M. Pulselli. "The ecological footprint of building construction." In SUSTAINABLE CITY 2006. Southampton, UK: WIT Press, 2006. http://dx.doi.org/10.2495/sc060331.

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HU, XINLEI, and MARIA FRANCISCA LIMA. "ECOLOGICAL VALUE OF ABANDONED WILD LANDSCAPES IN CHINESE CITIES." In SUSTAINABLE CITY 2019. Southampton UK: WIT Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.2495/sc190301.

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Santelmann, M., J. McDonnell, J. Bolte, S. Chan, A. T. Morzillo, and D. Hulse. "Willamette water 2100: river basins as complex social-ecological systems." In The Sustainable City 2012. Southampton, UK: WIT Press, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.2495/sc120481.

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Dunavant, R. B. "The conscious human ecological experience, conscious design, and the evolution of the built environment." In SUSTAINABLE CITY 2016. Southampton UK: WIT Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.2495/sc160031.

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BAYOUMI, OLA ALI, MOHAMED ABDELLAL, MOHAMED FEKRY, and AMR ALI BAYOUMI. "DEVELOPING AN ECOLOGICAL ASSESSMENT TOOL FOR SIWAN ECO-LODGES IN THE EGYPTIAN WESTERN DESERT." In SUSTAINABLE CITY 2019. Southampton UK: WIT Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.2495/sc190291.

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Solidoro, C., G. Cossarini, and D. Melaku Canu. "Environmental management and numerical models: examples from long-term ecological research on a real case study." In SUSTAINABLE CITY 2006. Southampton, UK: WIT Press, 2006. http://dx.doi.org/10.2495/sc060381.

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KANDIL, RANA ASHRAF, ALAA SARHAN, and RANIA ELSAYED ABDELGALIL. "URBAN ECOLOGICAL FOOTPRINT ANALYSIS AS AN EVALUATION TOOL FOR SUSTAINABILITY: ANALYSIS OF THE BUILT-UP LAND FOOTPRINT OF ALEXANDRIA CITY, EGYPT." In SUSTAINABLE CITY 2019. Southampton UK: WIT Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.2495/sc190241.

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Li, Shuxue, and Peiying Chen. "On Sustainable and Ecological Urban Planning Mumford’s Thought on the City." In 2013 International Conference on Information, Business and Education Technology (ICIBET-2013). Paris, France: Atlantis Press, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.2991/icibet.2013.178.

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Marsousi, N., and A. R. Lajevardi. "The evaluation of ecological sustainable development capacities in Kashan: an historic city of Iran." In SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT AND PLANNING 2011. Southampton, UK: WIT Press, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.2495/sdp110311.

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Gao, Wanpeng, and Chuanhui Zhang. "Sustainable Development Problems of Ecological Environment in Alar City and its Countermeasures." In 2016 International Conference on Economy, Management and Education Technology. Paris, France: Atlantis Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.2991/icemet-16.2016.242.

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