Cities and the Anthropocene: Urban governance for the new era of regenerative cities

The emerging ‘grand challenges’ of climate change, resource scarcity and population growth present a risk nexus to cities in the Anthropocene. This article discusses the potential that rapid urbanisation presents to help mitigate these risks through large-scale transitions if future urban developmen...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Thomson, Giles, Newman, Peter
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/83394
_version_ 1848764579843145728
author Thomson, Giles
Newman, Peter
author_facet Thomson, Giles
Newman, Peter
author_sort Thomson, Giles
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description The emerging ‘grand challenges’ of climate change, resource scarcity and population growth present a risk nexus to cities in the Anthropocene. This article discusses the potential that rapid urbanisation presents to help mitigate these risks through large-scale transitions if future urban development is delivered using evidence-based policies that promote regenerative urban outcomes (e.g. decarbonising energy, recycling water and waste, generating local food, integrating biodiversity). Observations from an Australian case study are used to describe urban governance approaches capable of supporting regenerative urbanism. The regenerative urbanism concept is associated with macro-scale urban and transport planning that shapes different urban fabrics (walking, transit, automobile), as the underlying infrastructure of each fabric exhibits a different performance, with automobile fabric being the least regenerative. Supporting urban systems based upon regenerative design principles at different scales (macro, meso and micro) can deliver deep and dramatic outcomes for not just reducing the impact of the grand challenges but turning them into regenerative change. In combination, these approaches form the cornerstone of regenerative cities that can address the grand challenges of the Anthropocene, while simultaneously improving livability and urban productivity to foster human flourishing.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T11:21:36Z
format Journal Article
id curtin-20.500.11937-83394
institution Curtin University Malaysia
institution_category Local University
language English
last_indexed 2025-11-14T11:21:36Z
publishDate 2020
publisher SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling curtin-20.500.11937-833942021-05-10T07:27:18Z Cities and the Anthropocene: Urban governance for the new era of regenerative cities Thomson, Giles Newman, Peter Science & Technology Social Sciences Life Sciences & Biomedicine Environmental Studies Urban Studies Environmental Sciences & Ecology Anthropocene regenerative cities regenerative design urban fabrics urban governance urban transitions SUSTAINABILITY The emerging ‘grand challenges’ of climate change, resource scarcity and population growth present a risk nexus to cities in the Anthropocene. This article discusses the potential that rapid urbanisation presents to help mitigate these risks through large-scale transitions if future urban development is delivered using evidence-based policies that promote regenerative urban outcomes (e.g. decarbonising energy, recycling water and waste, generating local food, integrating biodiversity). Observations from an Australian case study are used to describe urban governance approaches capable of supporting regenerative urbanism. The regenerative urbanism concept is associated with macro-scale urban and transport planning that shapes different urban fabrics (walking, transit, automobile), as the underlying infrastructure of each fabric exhibits a different performance, with automobile fabric being the least regenerative. Supporting urban systems based upon regenerative design principles at different scales (macro, meso and micro) can deliver deep and dramatic outcomes for not just reducing the impact of the grand challenges but turning them into regenerative change. In combination, these approaches form the cornerstone of regenerative cities that can address the grand challenges of the Anthropocene, while simultaneously improving livability and urban productivity to foster human flourishing. 2020 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/83394 10.1177/0042098018779769 English SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD fulltext
spellingShingle Science & Technology
Social Sciences
Life Sciences & Biomedicine
Environmental Studies
Urban Studies
Environmental Sciences & Ecology
Anthropocene
regenerative cities
regenerative design
urban fabrics
urban governance
urban transitions
SUSTAINABILITY
Thomson, Giles
Newman, Peter
Cities and the Anthropocene: Urban governance for the new era of regenerative cities
title Cities and the Anthropocene: Urban governance for the new era of regenerative cities
title_full Cities and the Anthropocene: Urban governance for the new era of regenerative cities
title_fullStr Cities and the Anthropocene: Urban governance for the new era of regenerative cities
title_full_unstemmed Cities and the Anthropocene: Urban governance for the new era of regenerative cities
title_short Cities and the Anthropocene: Urban governance for the new era of regenerative cities
title_sort cities and the anthropocene: urban governance for the new era of regenerative cities
topic Science & Technology
Social Sciences
Life Sciences & Biomedicine
Environmental Studies
Urban Studies
Environmental Sciences & Ecology
Anthropocene
regenerative cities
regenerative design
urban fabrics
urban governance
urban transitions
SUSTAINABILITY
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/83394