| Literature DB >> 35157255 |
Linda Westman1, James Patterson2, Rachel Macrorie3, Christopher J Orr4, Catherine M Ashcraft5, Vanesa Castán Broto6, Dana Dolan7, Mukesh Gupta8, Jeroen van der Heijden9, Thomas Hickmann10, Robert Hobbins11, Marielle Papin12, Enora Robin6, Christina Rosan13, Jonas Torrens14, Robert Webb15.
Abstract
The crises that cities face-such as climate change, pandemics, economic downturn, and racism-are tightly interlinked and cannot be addressed in isolation. This paper addresses compound urban crises as a unique type of problem, in which discrete solutions that tackle each crisis independently are insufficient. Few scholarly debates address compound urban crises and there is, to date, a lack of interdisciplinary insights to inform urban governance responses. Combining ideas from complex adaptive systems and critical urban studies, we develop a set of boundary concepts (unsettlement, unevenness, and unbounding) to understand the complexities of compound urban crises from an interdisciplinary perspective. We employ these concepts to set a research agenda on compound urban crises, highlighting multiple interconnections between urban politics and global dynamics. We conclude by suggesting how these entry points provide a theoretical anchor to develop practical insights to inform and reform urban governance.Entities:
Keywords: Cities; Complex adaptive systems; Compound urban crises; Critical urban studies; Governance
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35157255 PMCID: PMC8853022 DOI: 10.1007/s13280-021-01697-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ambio ISSN: 0044-7447 Impact factor: 5.129
Fig. 1Multiple crises facing cities, viewed as either A singular crises, or B compound crises based on differences in temporal dynamics
Causes and impacts in studies with a framing of singular crisis (with examples from Covid-19), transboundary crises, and compound risks (drawing on the climate change literature)
| Framing | Temporal | Spatial | Sectoral |
|---|---|---|---|
| Singular crisis | Crisis onset as a sudden moment when | A single root | |
| Transboundary crisis | The | There is no ‘ground zero’ (Boin | |
| Compound risks | Compound risks involve multiple | Compound risks arise from the interaction of multiple | Compound risks arise from |
Boundary concept definitions and summary of complementary insights brought by CAS and CUS
| Definition | CAS | CUS | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Unsettlement | A state in which compound crises come to “unsettle” governance processes and everyday ways of life (Orr | CAS theory explains how unsettlement arises from the interconnected nature of complex systems, with destabilising drivers and feedbacks that are difficult to anticipate and control | CUS recognises that structural political–economic forces create a permanent state of risk and instability in urban life for millions of people worldwide (Schilling et al. |
| Unevenness | The differentiation of experiences, impacts, and responses of compound urban crises across groups in diverse societies. Both compound crises themselves, as well as governance responses, contribute to unevenness | From a CAS perspective, unevenness relates to the principle of path dependency, which explains how differentiation within a system arises and persists over time | CUS highlights multiple historical drivers that produce and reproduce social categories of difference |
| Unbounding | The indeterminate conceptual and political scope of compound urban crises, which do not have clear stopping rules for delineating causes and effects and involve unanticipated interactions | The CAS literature highlights emergence as a key property of complex adaptive systems, which captures how the interaction between different forms of shocks creates entirely new and unpredictable phenomena | CUS emphasises that uncertainty is an inherent condition of urban life, but also that the framing of crises is a matter of social construction and power differentials |
Fig. 2Conceptualising urban governance challenges associated with compound urban crises according to three key boundary concepts (unsettlement, unevenness, unbounding), drawing on insights from CAS and CUT