Sustainability Citizenship in Cities
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Table of Contents

1. Sustainability citizenship in cities Part I. Framing sustainability citizenship 2. The praxis of sustainability citizenship 3. Urban resilience for sustainability 4. Urban food security and alternative economic practices 5. Sustainability citizens: Collaborative and disruptive social learning Part II. Housing and social innovation 6. Green housing developments: Sustainability pathway or cul-de-sac? 7. Structuring housing provision for urban sustainability 8. Co-working communities: Sustainability citizenship at work 9. Urban social innovation: Mobilising sustainability citizenship Part III. Place, access and equity 10. The gendered city 11. Informal settlements: Sustainability citizenship in action 12. Places for sustainability citizenship 13. An Indigenous perspective on sustainability citizenship Part IV. Citizen participation 14. Communicating sustainability in the city 15. The learning city for sustainability 16. Curating the city: Encouraging sustainability 17. Ethical consumers and sustainability citizenship 18. Futures for sustainability citizenship

About the Author

Ralph Horne is Professor of Geography, Centre for Urban Research, RMIT University, Melbourne, Australia, and Director of the Cities Programme (United Nations Global Compact).


John Fien, formerly Professor of Sustainability in RMIT University’s Innovation Leadership Program (2005–2013), was appointed Executive Director of the Swinburne University Leadership Institute, Hawthorn, Australia in late 2013.


Beau B. Beza is Senior Lecturer in the Planning and Landscape Architecture Program, School of Architecture and Built Environment, Deakin University, Geelong, Australia.


Anitra Nelson is Associate Professor in the Centre for Urban Research, RMIT University, Melbourne, Australia.

Reviews

"This edited collection is a valuable contribution to our understanding of the relation between citizenship and environmental sustainability. The authors approach sustainability citizenship as a work-in-progress, but the focus on its practical articulations — emphasising collective responsibilities, participatory democracy and ‘being’ rather than ‘having’ — provides conceptual coherence to the volume." – Benito Cao, Lecturer in Politics at the University of Adelaide, Australia and author of Environment and Citizenship (2015)"Finally, a bid for the future that is different, imaginative and realistic: a vision which every reader can (perhaps should) help bring to life; a work that is not only against neo-liberalism, but is for an achievable humane alternative that is good for the world – its biodiversity, its sustainability and the wellbeing of its stewards. A must-read within and beyond urban studies." – Susan J Smith, Honorary Professor of Social and Economic Geography and The Mistress of Girton College, University of Cambridge, UK"Achieving voluntary behaviour change to sustainable forms of living and consumption practices represents one of the grand challenges of the 21st century. The model of sustainability citizenship advanced in this book represents a critical and under-researched pathway to this transformation — beyond that more commonly focused on individual attitudes and behaviours." – Peter W. Newton, Research Professor in Sustainable Urbanism, Swinburne University of Technology, Australia"Sustainability citizenship is a concept which can constructively move discussion of social change for sustainability well beyond the limited framings of neoliberal discourse. This unique collection takes a major step in advancing understandings of sustainability citizenship by making clear that it is not only an abstracted idealist concept but something happening, and shaping the future, now." – Matt Watson, Senior Lecturer in Human Geography, University of Sheffield, UK"This timely, comprehensive volume firmly ties the epic statement ‘global environmental crisis’ to human experience in the urban age. In stories charged as much with hope as danger, its contributors make clear that the serious species threat posed by the ecological crisis is just as much an opportunity for myriad forms of sustainability citizenship to evolve and flourish." – Brendan Gleeson, Director at the Melbourne Sustainable Society Institute, The University of Melbourne, Australia

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