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Full-Text Articles in Urban Studies and Planning

The Role Of Diverse Values Of Nature In Visioning And Transforming Towards Just And Sustainable Futures, Adrian Martin, Patrick O’Farrell, Ritesh Kumar, Uta Eser, Daniel Faith, Erik Gomez- Baggethun, Zuzana V. Harmáčková, Andra-Ioana Horcea-Milcu, Juliana Merçon, Martin Quaas, Julian Rode, Ricardo Rozzi, Nadia Sitas, Yuki Yoshida, Tobias Nyumba Ochieng, Ann-Kathrin Koessler, Natalia Lutti Hummel, Lelani Mannetti, Gabriela Arroyo-Robles Oct 2022

The Role Of Diverse Values Of Nature In Visioning And Transforming Towards Just And Sustainable Futures, Adrian Martin, Patrick O’Farrell, Ritesh Kumar, Uta Eser, Daniel Faith, Erik Gomez- Baggethun, Zuzana V. Harmáčková, Andra-Ioana Horcea-Milcu, Juliana Merçon, Martin Quaas, Julian Rode, Ricardo Rozzi, Nadia Sitas, Yuki Yoshida, Tobias Nyumba Ochieng, Ann-Kathrin Koessler, Natalia Lutti Hummel, Lelani Mannetti, Gabriela Arroyo-Robles

USI Publications

The chapter assesses the role of nature’s diverse values in supporting social-ecological transformations towards more just and sustainable futures. This is approached as a two-fold and mutually complementing task: a) assessing the diverse values that have been considered in developing and creating visions for, and scenarios of the future, particularly those relating to more just and sustainable futures; and b) assessing how interventions to incorporate more plural valuation into decisions can serve as leverage points for enabling and governing transformation towards just and sustainable futures.


Beyond Academia: A Case For Reviews Of Gray Literature For Science-Policy Processes And Applied Research, Yuki Yoshida, Nadia Sitas, Lelani Mannetti, Gabriela Arroyo-Robles, Marta Berbés-Blázquez, David Gonzalez Jimenez, Valerie Nelson, Aidin Niamir, Zuzana V. Harmáčková Oct 2022

Beyond Academia: A Case For Reviews Of Gray Literature For Science-Policy Processes And Applied Research, Yuki Yoshida, Nadia Sitas, Lelani Mannetti, Gabriela Arroyo-Robles, Marta Berbés-Blázquez, David Gonzalez Jimenez, Valerie Nelson, Aidin Niamir, Zuzana V. Harmáčková

USI Publications

Gray literature is increasingly considered to complement evidence and knowledge from peer-reviewed literature for science-policy processes and applied research. On the one hand, science-policy assessments need to both consider a diversity of worldviews, knowledge types and values from a variety of sectors and actor groups, and synthesize policy-relevant findings that are salient, legitimate and credible. On the other hand, practitioners and scholars conducting applied research, especially in environmental and health-related fields, are affected by the time lag and documented biases of academic publication processes. While gray literature holds diverse perspectives that need to be integrated in science-policy processes as well …


How Negative Frames Can Undermine Public Support For Studying Solar Geoengineering In The U.S., Toby Bolsen, Risa Palm, Justin Kingsland May 2022

How Negative Frames Can Undermine Public Support For Studying Solar Geoengineering In The U.S., Toby Bolsen, Risa Palm, Justin Kingsland

USI Publications

Scientists and policymakers have become interested in the viability of solar geoengineering as a way to manipulate the Earth’s temperature in the face of unabated global warming. This paper reports the results from a survey experiment designed to test predictions about the effects of exposure to framed messages about basic scientific research on solar geoengineering. Our findings reinforce other survey research showing that solar geoengineering is a generally unfamiliar concept, but also show that this topic has not yet become politicized. In addition, despite treatments of equal valence, we find that negative information can exert a more powerful influence than …


The Times Of Splintering Urbanism, Jean-Paul Addie Jan 2022

The Times Of Splintering Urbanism, Jean-Paul Addie

USI Publications

The twentieth anniversary of Splintering Urbanism’s publication is an apropos moment to consider the significance of time in, and for, critical infrastructure studies. This commentary brings Splintering Urbanism into dialogue with Lefebvre’s Rhythmanalysis to explore how time and temporality can (re)frame, extend, and challenge how we engage and analyze the networked metropolis. As an empirical concern, conceptual framework, and methodological approach, “infrastructure time” discloses commonalities and contradictions emerging across the infrastructure turn, enriching our understanding of the production of infrastructure space and helping us pose questions about urbanization, urban politics, and the urban condition in new and generative ways


Disconnected In A Pandemic: Covid-19 Outcomes And The Digital Divide In The United States, Fei Li Jan 2022

Disconnected In A Pandemic: Covid-19 Outcomes And The Digital Divide In The United States, Fei Li

USI Publications

The COVID-19 pandemic has exacerbated inequalities related to the digital divide. With the wide adoption of remote working and learning, telehealth, and virtual events and social activities, the technology have-nots and know-nots experienced substantial marginalization and elevated risks of COVID-19 exposure in daily lives. This study discusses the pathways through which digital exclusion could aggravate the impacts of the pandemic and explored the linkage between digital access and COVID-19 outcomes in U.S. counties. It finds that counties with higher percentages of digitally excluded populations have seen higher COVID-19 case and death rates throughout the pandemic and lower vaccination rates by …