Results 61-80 of 280.
![]() Hesse, Markus ![]() Article for general public (2018) Detailed reference viewed: 103 (2 UL)![]() Hesse, Markus ![]() in Handwörterbuch der Stadt- und Raumentwicklung (2018) Der Beitrag thematisiert Suburbanisierung als ein seit der Nachkriegszeit bestimmendes Element der Raumentwicklung in Deutschland und Mitteleuropa. Dazu werden suburbane Räume als Teil der ... [more ▼] Der Beitrag thematisiert Suburbanisierung als ein seit der Nachkriegszeit bestimmendes Element der Raumentwicklung in Deutschland und Mitteleuropa. Dazu werden suburbane Räume als Teil der Großstadtregionen behandelt. Neben einem Überblick über den Stand der Forschung zur Suburbanisierung wird ein besonderes Augenmerk auf Fragen von Diskurs, Politik und Planung gelegt. [less ▲] Detailed reference viewed: 233 (7 UL)![]() Hesse, Markus ![]() in Flagge, Ingeborg (Ed.) Witry & Witry - Über das Wohnen (2018) Der Beitrag enthält eine Reflexion über die Praxis von Architektur, Stadtplanung und Urbanismus im Großherzogtum Luxemburg. Insofern stellt er eine Rahmung für die in dem Band präsentierte Werkschau des ... [more ▼] Der Beitrag enthält eine Reflexion über die Praxis von Architektur, Stadtplanung und Urbanismus im Großherzogtum Luxemburg. Insofern stellt er eine Rahmung für die in dem Band präsentierte Werkschau des Büros Witry & Witry in Echternach, Luxemburg, dar. Es geht um die Spezifika der sozioökonomischen Entwicklung des Landes und ihrer Implikationen für die baulich-räumliche Entwicklung, die ohne Berücksichtigung Ersterer nicht angemessen nachzuvollziehen ist. Entsprechendes gilt für die Positionierung planerischer Interventionen, oder für die Beurteilung der Passfähigkeit von Innovationen wie Partizipation der Öffentlichkeit. [less ▲] Detailed reference viewed: 97 (4 UL)![]() Hesse, Markus ![]() in Raumforschung und Raumordnung (2017), 76(2), 149-163 Detailed reference viewed: 208 (3 UL)![]() Hesse, Markus ![]() Article for general public (2017) Als Hauptstadt übernimmt Luxemburg zahlreiche Funktionen an Stelle des Staates. Als Wohnort ist sie den quartierspezifischen Interessen ausgesetzt. Die sich daraus ergebende Spannung fordert nicht nur ... [more ▼] Als Hauptstadt übernimmt Luxemburg zahlreiche Funktionen an Stelle des Staates. Als Wohnort ist sie den quartierspezifischen Interessen ausgesetzt. Die sich daraus ergebende Spannung fordert nicht nur Politik und Verwaltung heraus. Überlegungen zu den Bedingungen gelingender Partizipation von Bürgerschaft und Forschung. [less ▲] Detailed reference viewed: 278 (3 UL)![]() Hesse, Markus ![]() Article for general public (2017) Detailed reference viewed: 106 (7 UL)![]() Hesse, Markus ![]() Presentation (2017, May 10) Detailed reference viewed: 69 (3 UL)![]() Hesse, Markus ![]() in Local Environment (2017), 22(6), 784-785 Detailed reference viewed: 161 (0 UL)![]() Christmann, Nathalie ![]() ![]() ![]() in Ballini, Claude; Ecker, Serge; Grünkranz, Daniel (Eds.) et al Tracing Transitions (2017) Detailed reference viewed: 267 (27 UL)![]() Hesse, Markus ![]() Article for general public (2016) Detailed reference viewed: 84 (4 UL)![]() Hesse, Markus ![]() in European Urban and Regional Studies (2016), 23(4), 612-627 Detailed reference viewed: 353 (42 UL)![]() Hesse, Markus ![]() Article for general public (2016) Detailed reference viewed: 82 (3 UL)![]() Hesse, Markus ![]() in Informationen zur Raumentwicklung (2016), 2016(3), 533-545 Detailed reference viewed: 197 (3 UL)![]() Hesse, Markus ![]() ![]() Article for general public (2016) Detailed reference viewed: 168 (10 UL)![]() Hesse, Markus ![]() in DISP Dokumente und Informationen zur Schweizerischen Orts-, Regional- und Landesplanung (2016), 52(2), 82-83 Detailed reference viewed: 92 (1 UL)![]() Hesse, Markus ![]() in Zeitschrift für Wirtschaftsgeographie (2016), 60(1-2), 99-100 Detailed reference viewed: 226 (0 UL)![]() Hesse, Markus ![]() in Reckinger, Rachel; Wille, Christian; Kmec, Sonja (Eds.) et al Spaces and Identities in Border Regions. Politics – Media – Subjects (2016) Detailed reference viewed: 195 (9 UL)![]() Hesse, Markus ![]() in Reckinger, Rachel; Wille, Christian; Kmec, Sonja (Eds.) et al Spaces and Identities in Border Regions. Politics – Media – Subjects (2016) Detailed reference viewed: 200 (12 UL)![]() Carr, Constance ![]() ![]() Presentation (2016) Sustainable development remains a powerful concept across European and global fields of policy-making. Spurred by the all-encompassing threat of climate change, the rhetoric of a great transformation ... [more ▼] Sustainable development remains a powerful concept across European and global fields of policy-making. Spurred by the all-encompassing threat of climate change, the rhetoric of a great transformation successfully occupies current policy and practice. However, in contrast to the doom and gloom predictions, and in stark contrast to the sheer magnitude of the challenge of dealing with such complex set of problems, recent policy ideas and recipes seem trivial, and overly rationalised and optimistic. With respect to this, there are two interrelated issues that will be explored in this session. First, much of this new rationality of sustainability moults into popular labels such as ‘green’ or ‘smart’ where the city is the primary setting. This search for practical solutions in the city is further buttressed by the ‘sustainability business’ and associated green-washing practices that have emerged, as well as a variety of tools to assess, monitor, evaluate, and certify sustainability initiatives (indicators, metrics, and planning orthodoxies such as density, integrated, or holistic planning) that have become standard practice. Scholars have been active to identify the pitfalls here: Elgert & Krueger (2012) discussed the epistemology of metrics; Wiig (2015) interrogated the corporate strategy of a multi such as IBM behind ‘smart city’; Angelo & Wachsmuth (2015) criticised ‘methodological cityism’ in political ecology; Purcell (2006) showed the limits to localism; Mössner (2013) exposed socio-political limits of green cities. These criticisms highlight that there is something else to explore beyond current notions of sustainability. In this session, we explore further critiques of existing attempts, as well as conceptions of sustainability that embrace more contemporary imaginaries of urban geographies. These include critical reflections on super-optimist projects such as transition towns, or green cities (e.g. localism, methodological city-ism, green-washing in urban marketing), and thoughts on the disparity between the normative of sustainable development and current policy realities (How has this disparity changed? How is it produced? What lays outside the current lens? How has green urbanism changed over time and across places?). The second issue relates to expectations of knowledge proliferation in academia, as research communities are increasingly embedded in contradictory settings, expected to provide results and not problems, to be frank but constructive, and moreover, to be elite, excellent, income-generating as well as critical. In this respect, there is thus good reason to analyse the research-policy nexus, as Woods & Gardner (2011), Pain (2006), and Beaumont et al. (2005) have explored, examine the construction of knowledge claims as Rydin (2007) has explained, and rework some considerations with regards to rationalist modes in sustainable development and emerging sustainability modernities. We thus also want to interrogate the tensions between the construction of positivist sustainability on the one hand, and the position of the critical researcher on the other hand – the treading of the fine line between Dennis Judd’s (2005) claim that urban scholars tend to assume that “everything is always going to hell” (Judd 2005) and Elbert Hubbard’s classical “positive anything is better than negative nothing” (Hawthorne 1902). Concrete questions addressed here are: Who is producing claims to knowledge in practices of sustainable development urbanism? What are the possibilities and limitations for researchers to balance constructive interventionism with realistic limits of sustainable development and all its complexities, messy politics, wicked problems that are observed in human geography? How is it possible to pursue state-led contract work while maintaining critical integrity? What are relevant reflections the ontology, methodology and ethics of applied SD research practice? [less ▲] Detailed reference viewed: 229 (3 UL) |
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