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This book reviews a series of new urban ideas or themes designed to
help make cities more liveable, sustainable, safe and inclusive.
Featuring examples drawn from cities all over the world, the
various chapters provide critical assessments of each of the
various approaches and their potential to improve urban life. New
Urbanism: creating new areas based on a more humane scale with
neighbourhood cohesion Just Cities: creating more fairness in
decision-making so all residents can participate and benefit. Green
Cities: helping places become greener with environmental
rehabilitation and protection Sustainable Cities: avoiding the
waste of resources and harmful pollution in settlements Transition
Towns: developing local initiatives for more sustainable actions
Winter Cities: making cities in cold climates more comfortable and
enjoyable Resilient Cities: strengthening cities to better enable
them to withstand natural hazards Creative Cities: supporting
cultural industries and attracting talented individuals Knowledge
Cities: creating, renewing and spreading knowledge and innovation
Safe Cities: ensuring that citizens are better protected against
criminal actions Healthy Cities: making improvements in the health
of people in cities Festive Cities: rediscovering the utility of
festive events in settlements Slow Cities: enhancing locally unique
activities, such as local cuisines and community interactions This
volume offers a host of approaches designed to give a new direction
and focus to planning policies, helping readers to fully understand
the advantages and disadvantages of each potential idea. It seeks
to solve the many current problems associated with urban
developments, making it a valuable resource for university and
college students in urban geography, urban planning, urban
sociology and urban studies as well as to planners and the general
public.
This book reviews a series of new urban ideas or themes designed to
help make cities more liveable, sustainable, safe and inclusive.
Featuring examples drawn from cities all over the world, the
various chapters provide critical assessments of each of the
various approaches and their potential to improve urban life.
New Urbanism: creating new areas based on a more humane scale
with neighbourhood cohesion Just Cities: creating more
fairness in decision-making so all residents can participate and
benefit. Green Cities: helping places become greener with
environmental rehabilitation and protection Sustainable Cities:
avoiding the waste of resources and harmful pollution in
settlements Transition Towns: developing local initiatives for more
sustainable actions Winter Cities: making cities in cold
climates more comfortable and enjoyable Resilient Cities:
strengthening cities to better enable them to withstand natural
hazards Creative Cities: supporting cultural industries and
attracting talented individuals Knowledge Cities: creating,
renewing and spreading knowledge and innovation Safe Cities:
ensuring that citizens are better protected against criminal
actions Healthy Cities: making improvements in the health of people
in cities Festive Cities: rediscovering the utility of festive
events in settlements Slow Cities: enhancing locally unique
activities, such as local cuisines and community interactions This
volume offers a host of approaches designed to give a new direction
and focus to planning policies, helping readers to fully understand
the advantages and disadvantages of each potential idea. It seeks
to solve the many current problems associated with urban
developments, making it a valuable resource for university and
college students in urban geography, urban planning, urban
sociology and urban studies as well as to planners and the general
public.
Writing Geographical Exploration summarizes the various factors
that influence the writing and interpretation of exploration
narratives, demonstrating the limitations of the assumption that
there is a direct relationship between what the explorer saw and
what the text describes. Davies offers a revisionist evaluation of
Captain Thomas James, who spent eighteen months in search of the
Northwest Passage in the 1630s, to illustrate how modern textual
analysis can enrich the appreciation of a traveller's account.
Though James's work has been dismissed in the modern period, his
work was highly regarded in previous centuries by scientist Robert
Boyle and poet Samuel Coleridge. James was not a first-rank
explorer, but he was an able navigator and leader, a perceptive
scientific observer and a master author who produced a thrilling
tale of adventure that should occupy a more prominent place in
exploration writing and history, literary theory, and post-modern
geography.
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