Cities Demanding the Earth: A New Understanding of the Climate Emergency
Peter Taylor, Geoff O'Brien, and Phil O'Keefe
Abstract
Current climate change policy is necessary but insufficient. This is because the basic modus operandi – presenting scientific evidence to states for them to take action - misrepresents the complex process of anthropogenic climate change. The ‘anthropo’ bit is neglected in a misconceived supply-side (carbon) interpretation. The key question is, why is there so much demand for this carbon in the first place? This book introduces a demand-side interpretation bringing cities to the fore as central players in both generating climate changes and for finding solutions. Jane Jacobs’ urban analysis is ... More
Current climate change policy is necessary but insufficient. This is because the basic modus operandi – presenting scientific evidence to states for them to take action - misrepresents the complex process of anthropogenic climate change. The ‘anthropo’ bit is neglected in a misconceived supply-side (carbon) interpretation. The key question is, why is there so much demand for this carbon in the first place? This book introduces a demand-side interpretation bringing cities to the fore as central players in both generating climate changes and for finding solutions. Jane Jacobs’ urban analysis is combined with William F. Ruddiman’s historical tracing of greenhouse gases to provide a new understanding and narrative of anthropogenic climate change. The conclusion is that we are locked into a path to terminal consumption, which is accelerating as a consequence of Chinese urban growth, historically unprecedented in its sheer scale. To counter this we need to harness the power of cities in new ways, to steer urban demand away from its current destructive path. This is nothing less than re-inventing the city: not mitigation (the resilient city, necessary but not sufficient), not adaptation (sustainable city, also necessary but not sufficient) but stewardship, a process of dynamic stability creating the posterity city in sync with nature.
Keywords:
Anthropogenic climate change,
Chinese urban growth,
Demand-side policy,
Jane Jacobs,
Posterity city,
William F Ruddiman
Bibliographic Information
Print publication date: 2020 |
Print ISBN-13: 9781529210477 |
Published to Policy Press Scholarship Online: September 2020 |
DOI:10.1332/policypress/9781529210477.001.0001 |
Authors
Affiliations are at time of print publication.
Peter Taylor, author
University of Loughborough
Geoff O'Brien, author
Northumbria University
Phil O'Keefe, author
Northumbria University
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