Days: Thursday, June 22nd Friday, June 23rd Saturday, June 24th
View this program: with abstractssession overviewtalk overview
The event begins with a short welcome speech from Eva Marín Hlynsdóttir Professor of Public Policy and Governance, University of Iceland and the chair of EURA 2023 conference committee followed by a short note from Filipe Teles Pro-rector at Aveiro University, Portugal and President of the European Urban Research Association
We are happy to welcome Professor Matthew Carmona of Planning and Urban Design at The Bartlett, UCL, UK and Tina Saaby the Director of The Danish Town Planning Institute as our key note speekers.
For more information please visit https://eura2023.is/keynotes/
The underlying and often explicit purpose of research in urban affairs is the realization of just cities in which individuals have equitable access to resources, opportunities, and rights. In this scholarly discourse, the weight of responsibility to bring about this ideal scenario is placed on strategic and often reformative policies and practices that remediate and prevent inequities. The content of such research ranges from theoretical treatises that seek to conceptualize and explain the values, limitations, and possibilities of policy, to very explicit empirically driven analyses of actual policy implementations and impacts. This panel of journal editors seeks to identify the key themes of urban scholarship, the questions raised, methods used, and insights developed. Ultimately, we ask the hard questions: does urban scholarship matter? When is it effective in shaping equitable policy? How can we make it more impactful? The panelists will address some specific subtopics such as: What topics and themes have emerged that articulate social justice struggles? How have scholars framed their work via new theories and methodologies? How have race, ethnicity, gender, identity, nationality, beliefs, been framed and analyzed? Which policies have dominated discourse? What is missing from current discourse?
11:20 | Gender and Justice in Planning Scholarship (abstract) |
11:40 | Can the New Urban Theory Help in Rethinking the Just City? (abstract) |
12:00 | Global Urban Scholarship and Social Justice (abstract) PRESENTER: Bernadette Hanlon |
12:20 | Engaged Scholarship and Urban Justice (abstract) |
In recent years political commentators in countries from across Europe have drawn attention to the rise of far-right political parties. In 2015 Poland elected a far-right government and, in the following year, a manipulative campaign run by right wing activists resulted in the UK deciding, to leave the European Union. This was followed by the election of populist-right governments in Austria and Italy, with Hungary re-electing Viktor Orban’s Fidesz party in 2018. Some believed that the COVID-19 pandemic, which had a major impact on European society in the period from early 2020, would end the wave of populist gains. Unfortunately, this optimistic view turned out to be misplaced - 2022 witnessed a further surge in support for nationalistic, Eurosceptic, anti-immigrant political parties. In April Viktor Orban followed up his 2018 victory with an even larger win. In September the general election in Sweden saw a rise in support for the radical-right Swedish Democrats while, in Italy, a centre-right coalition led by Giorgia Meloni’s Brothers of Italy, a far-right party with neo-fascist roots, won an absolute majority of seats in the Italian Parliament.
These developments are both important and troubling. Participants in this panel will aim to advance understanding of how to resist far-right populism by presenting ideas examining two related questions:
How do we explain why populist and far-right politicians have been gaining ground in various countries and contexts?What policies and practices have cities and communities developed and delivered to counter radical right movements?The threat from the far-right to cities and communities, and society in general, is substantial. While the populist right operates in different ways in different countries, and political struggles vary in different contexts, seven worrying features in right-wing thinking and practice have emerged:
1) Prizing the individual over the collective;
2) Favouring private wealth over community wellbeing;
3) Paying little or no regard to social justice;
4) Taking steps to denigrate, or ‘other’, non-white people, immigrants, gay people, LGTB+ people and other minorities in society;
5) Disregarding or downplaying the current climate and ecological emergencies;
6) Acting to weaken local, regional, and central government democratic institutions, and
7) Eroding the rights of citizens to demonstrate and protest in public spaces.
The papers to be presented in this panel will provide evidence drawn from several different countries on how city leaders and activists are working to develop approaches to city governance that prioritise social and economic inclusion, bold action in response to climate change, and strive to promote understanding and respect in our increasingly multi-cultural societies.
In recent years political commentators in countries from across Europe have drawn attention to the rise of far-right political parties. In 2015 Poland elected a far-right government and, in the following year, a manipulative campaign run by right wing activists resulted in the UK deciding, to leave the European Union. This was followed by the election of populist-right governments in Austria and Italy, with Hungary re-electing Viktor Orban’s Fidesz party in 2018. Some believed that the COVID-19 pandemic, which had a major impact on European society in the period from early 2020, would end the wave of populist gains. Unfortunately, this optimistic view turned out to be misplaced - 2022 witnessed a further surge in support for nationalistic, Eurosceptic, anti-immigrant political parties. In April Viktor Orban followed up his 2018 victory with an even larger win. In September the general election in Sweden saw a rise in support for the radical-right Swedish Democrats while, in Italy, a centre-right coalition led by Giorgia Meloni’s Brothers of Italy, a far-right party with neo-fascist roots, won an absolute majority of seats in the Italian Parliament.
These developments are both important and troubling. Participants in this panel will aim to advance understanding of how to resist far-right populism by presenting ideas examining two related questions:
• How do we explain why populist and far-right politicians have been gaining ground in various countries and contexts?
• What policies and practices have cities and communities developed and delivered to counter radical right movements?
The threat from the far-right to cities and communities, and society in general, is substantial. While the populist right operates in different ways in different countries, and political struggles vary in different contexts, seven worrying features in right-wing thinking and practice have emerged:
1) Prizing the individual over the collective; 2) Favouring private wealth over community wellbeing; 3) Paying little or no regard to social justice; 4) Taking steps to denigrate, or ‘other’, non-white people, immigrants, gay people, LGTB+ people and other minorities in society; 5) Disregarding or downplaying the current climate and ecological emergencies;6) Acting to weaken local, regional, and central government democratic institutions, and7) Eroding the rights of citizens to demonstrate and protest in public spaces.
The papers to be presented in this panel will provide evidence drawn from several different countries on how city leaders and activists are working to develop approaches to city governance that prioritise social and economic inclusion, bold action in response to climate change, and strive to promote understanding and respect in our increasingly multi-cultural societies.
Ignazio Vinci (University of Palermo, Italy)
Le Anh Nguyen Long (University of Twente, Netherlands)
11:20 | The right and the city in Italian politics (abstract) |
11:40 | The role of protest art in resisting right-wing populism in the Philippines (abstract) |
12:00 | How do Polish cities resist centralising pressures? (abstract) PRESENTER: Marta Lackowska |
12:20 | Drawing on the power of place: Learning from the Bristol One City Approach (abstract) |
12:40 | People belong to places, places belong to people: exploring the place identity as a planning tool for more sustainable and inclusive local developments (abstract) |
11:20 | Influence of Superblock Measures on Citizens' Mobility Behavior, Perceived Quality of Stay, and Social Sense of Belonging (abstract) PRESENTER: Katharina Dinhof |
11:40 | Vertical Farming in the systemic city: cultivating communities and imagining co-evolutionary practices in an urban environment (abstract) |
12:00 | The changing composition of cities: managing the urban and regional setting Social inclusion as a tool for urban sustainability: a qualitative systematic review of the notion of ‚social sustainability’ in urban design management for mixed tenure housing. (abstract) |
12:20 | Managing Resilience: Local Coordination Structures in Crisis Governance (abstract) PRESENTER: Eva Platzer |
The presented in the panel should focus on spatial planning, concepts of changing the systems of urban mobility and implementation of its elements, they should also reflect on policies of building and developing the system of sustainable urban mobility. The debate addresses the questions of how cities change their public transport to make it more accessible, attractive and reliable, so that is can offer an attractive alternative to individual motorised transport. It reflects also on more sustainable use of a car within the city, if its sustainable use is possible, how it can be integrated with other means of urban transport, through parking policy, by the development of digital information systems on parking lots, multi-storage and underground garages in the city centres, supported by appropriate pricing policy. In this context also park and ride facilities and their role in reducing the number of cars in the city centres is discussed. Another point of discussion is restoration of cycling as a mean of everyday travel in the cities, thus the policies of developing this mode are put under consideration. This includes construction of network of cycling paths, bicycle racks and storages, and additional infrastructure. It also involves bike-sharing and the level of its development in the cities and the ways of its operation (direct management by the cities, public-private schemes etc.), similarly the new means of mobility like electric scooters and e-bikes which not only are an attractive mode of rapid movement for the users, but also a challenge for the city space and its management. Finally the issue of digitalization of urban mobility is outlined, with its forms and tools (MaaS, smartphone applications, but also traffic steering, ticket systems and interactive information systems). Sustainable urban mobility is a chance for improving the resilience of the cities, but at the same a great challenge, as it needs widespread changes in planning the public space, organizing the public transport, but also encouraging the stakeholders to change their habits and attitudes. Papers reflecting on general issues considering sustainable urban mobility, but also presenting case studies and qualitative, quantitative and comparative analyses are welcomed in this panel.
11:20 | First and last mile connectivity in regeneration projects: the case of Wirral Waters, England (abstract) PRESENTER: Tatiana Moreira de Souza |
11:40 | Making Cars in an Urban Setting Less Appealing from Up and Down: Comparative Approaches from Incheon and Chicago (abstract) |
12:00 | The Role of Motor Insurance in Realising Future Mobility (abstract) PRESENTER: Zakiyya Adam |
12:20 | System of sustainable urban mobility. Case of Stockholm (abstract) |
Regional resilience refers to the capacity of an economic ecosystem to resist, recover from, reorganize and renew in the face of exogenous shocks (Boschma, 2015). This capacity is related to the economic structure of a region, and, as a consequence, it is considered an ecosystem-level characteristic (Roundy, Brockman and Bradshaw, 2017). This ability is especially relevant in the current context of the crisis caused by COVID-19 pandemic that affected worldwide economies and has unforeseen impacts on local communities. Thus, this special session aims to promote the discussion about regional resilience in the context of crises, such as the current economic and social crisis caused by the Covid-19 pandemic or the war in Ukraine. Among the possible topics and questions that can be covered, the following topics are proposed:
• Measurement of regional resilience;
• Impact of local dynamics and stakeholders on local resilience on local resilience;
• Impact of regional and national policies on local resilience and development;
• Relationship between local entrepreneurship ecosystem characteristics and regional/local resilience;
• Cross-regional and cross-country comparisons, as well as longitudinal studies, to assess the determinants of territorial resilience;
• Role of community-led initiatives in fostering regional/local resilience during and after a shock, as well as the community involvement and commitment to improving the ‘initial conditions’ of a region;
• Role of anchor companies or sectors in promoting regional/local resilience;
Finally, it is crucial to continue the theoretical and empirical debate on why and how some places react and adapt better to shocks than others, given its extensive implication on regions’ development and people’s lives.
11:20 | The Role of citizen science approaches in the development of community resilience (abstract) PRESENTER: Ana Daniel |
11:40 | Once you see and feel it makes a difference. A Conceptual Framework and Measurement Approach to Capturing Resonance and Self-Efficacy as Drivers for Social Innovation and Resilience. (abstract) PRESENTER: Anna Herzog |
12:00 | Urban Mobility Systems in the face of accumulated crisis (abstract) |
12:20 | Resilience: misuse and application in urban landscapes (abstract) |
12:40 | THE INFLUENCE OF THE PENTA HELİX MODEL IN STRENGTHENING SOCIAL INNOVATION IN IZMIR/TÜRKİYE (abstract) PRESENTER: şüheda Köse |
Global environmental and social challenges, such as climate change, biodiversity loss,natural resources use and social equity, urge the need to protect ecosystems and buildi nclusive societies towards sustainability. Cities and urban systems play a paramount role in achieving a global sustainability transformation by understanding the environmental and social challenges, decision-making processes (e.g., policies, plans) and governance structures. There is a common understanding that current governance models mainly focused on siloed approaches across specialized bureaucracies cannot adequately respond to the challenges and tend to be inefficient in achieving a sustainable and resilient urban environment. A systematic approach between urban governance and complex adaptivesystem thinking can introduce new perspectives for a sustainable transformation pathway.This is inextricably tied up with understanding the decision-making processes (e.g., policy,plans, programs) and governance issues in urban systems within a new holistic perspective.Public participation in strategic planning for sustainable transformation plays an essentialrole as well as the understanding of the relationship between the different actors, theirinterconnection, and their involvement across geographic, institutional, and governance scales. Against this background, the panel aims to discuss the extent to which urban systems tackle sustainability challenges and how it gives new impetus to interdisciplinary policy, planning,and empirical practice. In the context of growing uncertainty, the panel encourages contributions that address urban and regional sustainability within an integrated perspective,through policy, planning, governance, and community involvement lens. The panel also welcomes contributions on how local governments are opening decision-making and planning processes, and how governance arrangements, community empowerment, andparticipatory decision-making support sustainability transformations. Contributions are also invited on the role of environmental assessment andhow it may be used to frame thesequestions. The panel encourages the submission of reflections from actors responsible for planning and designing for the sustainability and resilience of cities and regions as well as examples and practical case studies of significant challenges facing urban sustainability and resilience, sustainability assessments in governance, planning, and implementation of measures in cities and regions.
11:20 | Researching Patterns of Self-Organization in Urban Structures: Case Study Isfahan Bazaar (abstract) PRESENTER: Rojiar Soleimani |
11:40 | Urban Climate Governance: Implementation in Belgrade, Serbia (abstract) PRESENTER: Ana Šabanović |
12:00 | Urban Transformative Capacity and Urban Planning – conformity, conflicts and ambivalences. (abstract) |
12:20 | Revisiting tools for an “Urbanism of Uncertainty”: A mixed qualitative and quantitative approach (abstract) PRESENTER: Inès Ramirez-Cobo |
12:40 | Planning for sustainable and resilient territories: the need for bringing meaning to (buzz)words (abstract) |
11:20 | Measuring biocapacity of Portuguese municipalities: an opportunity to devise new natural capital funding mechanisms (abstract) PRESENTER: Sara Moreno Pires |
11:40 | CLIMAGE.PT: Earth System Accounting System to assess and monitor Portugal’s impacts in a scenario of the Stable climate being recognized as a Common Heritage of Humankind. (abstract) PRESENTER: Jorge Cristino |
12:00 | Urban Forests within Urban Flows. A Metabolic approach towards Resilient Cities of Tomorrow (abstract) |
12:20 | FOOD for thought for innovative cities an regions (abstract) PRESENTER: Anna Dąbrowska |
Territorial reform of local governments is a theme of continued salience on policy agendas on central and sub-national levels of government across Europe and beyond. In some countries, government-initiated reforms have reshuffled entire local government systems virtually overnight. In other countries, failed or semi-failed reform implementation has yielded a patchwork of localized changes. In some countries there is increasing incidence of amalgamations, even in the absence of government-initiated reform. Varying patterns of territorial reform have attracted growing scholarly attention, giving rise to an expanding body of studies of reforms in single countries as well as comparative studies. The panel will discuss papers that cover a broad range of approaches to the study of territorial reform of local governments, including:- Reform strategies, reform implementation and the effects of reforms on democracy, efficiency and other relevant measures- Single country studies and comparative analysis- Territorial reforms on all levels of sub-national government, including local governments, sub-local/parish councils, and regional/county governments- Qualitative/case based as well as quantitative analysis and meta-studies.
Jostein Askim (University of Oslo, Norway)
11:20 | “Use Time as a Tool, Not as a Crutch”: A Comparative Historical Analysis of Municipal Amalgamations in Europe (abstract) |
11:40 | When do municipal mergers occur? Drivers for territorial consolidation across 40 European countries and three decades (abstract) |
12:00 | The dark side of the amalgamation process: A well designed failure? (abstract) PRESENTER: Miguel Rodrigues |
12:20 | Renaming municipalities: territorial identities and local development, top-down decisions and participatory democratic practices (abstract) |
12:40 | The problem of horizontal neglect in local government: the case of mergers (abstract) PRESENTER: Kurt Houlberg |
In the past few years, European countries have experienced an increased fragmentation and segregation of urban identities, considering macro-level generational, demographic, social, religious, political, and economic changes. The role of identities and the sense of belonging in modern democracies are becoming more critical to understanding political participation at different levels of government (local, regional, national, and European). The strengthening of local democratic practices and experiments can be regarded as one of the possible strategies to enhance territorial cohesion, build collective identity and reduce the impact of social and economic cleavages. We invite theoretical and empirical papers that discuss democratic participation policies, frameworks, practices, and processes to foster a sense of belonging to different geographic locations, including vibrant urban communities. The papers may include the cases of participatory or deliberative democracy practices or civic engagement activities targeted at identifying and discussing the issues of the sense of belonging in urban territories. Moreover, the papers that identify and explore the barriers and factors that limit the engagement and inclusion of urban communities in democratic practices and disintegrate their political participation, representation, or trust in democratic institutions are also very welcomed. Particular attention is paid to small- and large-scale democratic innovations implemented by local or regional authorities and/or local community groups or active citizens.
11:20 | Civic participation forms and its meaning in contemporary Lithuania: community building by reclaiming urban space (abstract) |
11:40 | The ‘democratic participatory’ Pame Kaimakli festivals (abstract) PRESENTER: Veronika Antoniou |
12:00 | Citizens' participation from the local leaders' perspective (abstract) PRESENTER: Pavel Šaradín |
12:20 | Perspectives on public participation in coastal and marine planning in Iceland (abstract) |
12:40 | Democracy practices in urban gardening: case Finland (abstract) |
Organized by Jana Sifta the objective is to introduce the European Research Council, the premier European funding organisation for excellent frontier research, and to encourage the participants to apply for an ERC research grant under one of the main grant schemes (Starting Grant, Consolidator Grant, Advanced Grant and Synergy Grant).
View this program: with abstractssession overviewtalk overview
The city of Reykjavík is a young city in rapid development which is exciting and challenging at the same time. The Green Deal is the overall strategy of the City of Reykjavík that outlines the city's future vision until the year 2030 and links the city's key policies and plans to that vision. In this session, there will be several short talks and panel discussions based on the priorities of the city of Reykjavík with a focus on a sustainable city.
11:20 | Approaching the affective: Using sensory research methods to observe people’s relations to everyday heritage in central Reykjavik (abstract) PRESENTER: Snjólaug G Jóhannesdóttir |
11:40 | Developing an identities-based approach to support more robust resilience and recovery in heritage planning and management (abstract) PRESENTER: Zachary M. Jones |
12:00 | Tearing the inner city core with the new-build – case of Nis, Serbia (abstract) |
12:20 | Artist-led spatial production in the city. East Street Arts as urban activator (abstract) |
12:40 | Assessing Children’s Perception of Public Space Adjacent to Schools in Lombardy, Italy (abstract) PRESENTER: Dafni Riga |
11:20 | Hidden Barriers and Divisive Architecture: The role of 'everyday' space in conflict and peace building in Belfast (abstract) |
11:40 | A Qualitative Meta-Analysis of the Stakeholder Types in Urban Management (abstract) PRESENTER: Eran Vigoda-Gadot |
12:00 | Becoming Knowledgeable Stakeholders (abstract) |
12:20 | Spaces of asymmetry in sub-regional planning in England – what can we learn from dissonance and failure in the West of England? (abstract) |
12:40 | Heritage as home – Migrant mobilities and coexistence (abstract) |
Both the COVID pandemic and the war in Ukraine have added pressure to national and local housing systems across Europe. Owners, buyers and especially renters feel the burden of new mobility schemes, energy saving efforts and increasing demand for housing in the cities. This panel should comparatively assess current problems of housing policy across cities in Europe, but also innovative solutions designed for being adopted.
11:20 | Exploring and comparing the stages of gentrification in Taipei City based upon socio-economic status (abstract) PRESENTER: Tzu-Ling Chen |
11:40 | (Un)affordable housing in contemporary cities: towards a broader framing of the problem (abstract) PRESENTER: Massimo Bricocoli |
12:00 | Recognition in housing social work in fighting inequality of an urban planning project in Finland (abstract) |
12:20 | Healthy homes or future slums? The conversion of office buildings to residential use in England and Italy (abstract) PRESENTER: Manuela Madeddu |
12:40 | Qualifying the housing debate in contemporary cities. First evidences from the Observatory for housing affordability in Milan (abstract) PRESENTER: Marco Peverini |
11:20 | Exploring the spatial effects of cyber capital (abstract) |
11:40 | Hudson Yards Ecosystem and Smart City Development (abstract) |
12:00 | Smart cities for everyone - a scoping literature review with implications for governance and planning (abstract) PRESENTER: Charlotte Fridolfsson |
12:20 | Drone and artificial intelligence analyzing Zurich’s public realm: a case study using emerging technologies to understand the private-public interface. (abstract) |
12:40 | Platformisation of place experience – functions of digital platforms in the process of digital placemaking (abstract) |
The panel refers to the classic concepts of community power structure, but re-addresses old questions to the new and quickly evolving environment. Recent years have brought a rash of new initiatives and experiments aimed at increasing citizens’ participation and community involvement in urban governance (e.g. citizens’ juries, participatory budgeting and many others). New social movements have appeared on local political arenas, some of them explicitly focused on urban development and governance process. Expectations concerning behaviour of local politicians have also changed towards demand of more participatory and holistic styles of leadership. At the same time financial crisis, COVID-19 pandemics and energy crisis have undermined economic base of the cities, which have had an impact on potential roles of business actors in city governance. All this means that democratic urban governance and community power structures are in a state of dynamic change and uncertainty concerning the shape of future urban coalitions and the economic basis of urban government.
The panel will try to address questions how these changes may be interpreted in lights of existing theoretical concepts such as urban regimes or network governance theories? Do we need any modifications of existing or totally new conceptual approaches to understand contemporary power structures in European cities?
We invite both empirical case studies and comparative research as well as conceptual papers which might pave the ground for further research in the future.
11:20 | The role of non-elected actors in community power structure in Poland: results of survey experiment (abstract) |
11:40 | Public space - reinventing a new urban grammar (abstract) PRESENTER: Ana Cravinho |
12:00 | Transnational urban governance through critical times (abstract) |
12:20 | A revitalized post-pandemic town centre (abstract) |
12:40 | Smartening tourism governance in European cities: a discourse and sentiment analysis based on LDA (abstract) PRESENTER: Ana Pastor Alcaraz |
Global environmental and social challenges, such as climate change, biodiversity loss,natural resources use and social equity, urge the need to protect ecosystems and buildi nclusive societies towards sustainability. Cities and urban systems play a paramount role in achieving a global sustainability transformation by understanding the environmental and social challenges, decision-making processes (e.g., policies, plans) and governance structures. There is a common understanding that current governance models mainly focused on siloed approaches across specialized bureaucracies cannot adequately respond to the challenges and tend to be inefficient in achieving a sustainable and resilient urban environment. A systematic approach between urban governance and complex adaptivesystem thinking can introduce new perspectives for a sustainable transformation pathway.This is inextricably tied up with understanding the decision-making processes (e.g., policy,plans, programs) and governance issues in urban systems within a new holistic perspective.Public participation in strategic planning for sustainable transformation plays an essentialrole as well as the understanding of the relationship between the different actors, theirinterconnection, and their involvement across geographic, institutional, and governance scales. Against this background, the panel aims to discuss the extent to which urban systems tackle sustainability challenges and how it gives new impetus to interdisciplinary policy, planning,and empirical practice. In the context of growing uncertainty, the panel encourages contributions that address urban and regional sustainability within an integrated perspective,through policy, planning, governance, and community involvement lens. The panel also welcomes contributions on how local governments are opening decision-making and planning processes, and how governance arrangements, community empowerment, andparticipatory decision-making support sustainability transformations. Contributions are also invited on the role of environmental assessment andhow it may be used to frame thesequestions. The panel encourages the submission of reflections from actors responsible for planning and designing for the sustainability and resilience of cities and regions as well as examples and practical case studies of significant challenges facing urban sustainability and resilience, sustainability assessments in governance, planning, and implementation of measures in cities and regions.
11:20 | Cities as enablers and boundary-setters in sustainability transformation (abstract) |
11:40 | Sustainable Cities: the role of actors in Strategic Environmental Assessment of Urban Planning processes (abstract) PRESENTER: Alexandra Polido |
12:00 | The effect of Cool pavement on reducing CO2 in urban-scale (abstract) PRESENTER: Yu-Chun Su |
12:20 | Research on Retreat Strategy in high-risk area to Improve Urban Resilience in Response to Climate Change (abstract) PRESENTER: Wei Han Cheng |
12:40 | Urban sustainability in Germany: Which factors can explain the variety of commitment? (abstract) |
European cities’ influence and confidence have grown in recent decades. City governments have gained new agency, become better networked and developed an increasingly confidents ense of shared identity. But the challenges Europe’s cities face seem to grow at an ever faster pace. Climate change, COVID recovery, migration pressures, inequalities, political polarisation, technological change, to name a few, all demand that city leaders work in new(and some say radical) ways. Aware of these challenges, many European cities are collaborating across traditional government, sectoral and territorial boundaries; deepening relations with citizens and forging new political alliances; setting ambitious decarbonisation targets; testing and engaging with post-growth models of development... However, there is also a sense thatthe limited authority, administrative capacity, and financial resources of cities are majorconstraints that may ultimately prevent them from meeting the challenges ahead. More research is urgently needed into the causes and effects of these developments.Our shared global challenges call for a complete rethinking of urban life. European citieshave long been at the forefront of urban innovation and could lead the way in developingnew socioeconomic and governance models and more inclusive and sustainable ways ofliving. Some large European cities such as Paris, Vienna and Amsterdam show that radical agendas can lead to electoral successes. But smaller, less well-known cities have also shown great appetite and potential for change. Nevertheless, in developing new these new models,cities will need support from national governments, international bodies and civil society organisations, including academia. This panel represents and attempts to answer this call. Beyond the themes and arenas of analysis mentioned above, many other broad questions are relevant in guiding our discussion, for example: what new governance capabilities need to be created? What can European cities learn from one another, and from cities in other global regions, to help them better confront these challenges? Can context specific insights about governance arrangements travel in time and space? What support do European city leaders need to meet the challenges ahead?
11:20 | Urban innovation and creativity-based policies (abstract) |
11:40 | European urban agenda beyond the EU: The European inter-urban networks and urban resilience in the Balkans (abstract) |
12:00 | Viable Cities and Private Sector Engagement in Urban Climate Change Mitigation: A case study of Malmö, Sweden (abstract) PRESENTER: Selma Mujkic |
12:20 | Capital cities in captivity of their national governments (abstract) |
12:40 | Qualitative Comparative Analysis of inter-municipal collaboration effectiveness in the Balkans: a study of the efficacy of multipurpose municipal associations in Bulgaria (abstract) PRESENTER: Lachezar Anguelov |
11:20 | Do female mayors support and implement participatory tools? Evidence from Czech Cities (abstract) |
11:40 | Do we need urban parish councils? The problems in England (abstract) |
12:00 | Does a female mayor make a difference? Pinpointing the causal link between the descriptive and substantial representation in local government (abstract) |
12:20 | An Inclusive Approach to Read Community Participation: Communities of Practice (abstract) |
12:40 | A local government politician - when need or in deed? The role of local-level experience in the central-level politics (abstract) PRESENTER: Wirginia Aksztejn |
In the past few years, European countries have experienced an increased fragmentation and segregation of urban identities, considering macro-level generational, demographic, social, religious, political, and economic changes. The role of identities and the sense of belonging in modern democracies are becoming more critical to understanding political participation at different levels of government (local, regional, national, and European). The strengthening of local democratic practices and experiments can be regarded as one of the possible strategies to enhance territorial cohesion, build collective identity and reduce the impact of social and economic cleavages. We invite theoretical and empirical papers that discuss democratic participation policies, frameworks, practices, and processes to foster a sense of belonging to different geographic locations, including vibrant urban communities. The papers may include the cases of participatory or deliberative democracy practices or civic engagement activities targeted at identifying and discussing the issues of the sense of belonging in urban territories. Moreover, the papers that identify and explore the barriers and factors that limit the engagement and inclusion of urban communities in democratic practices and disintegrate their political participation, representation, or trust in democratic institutions are also very welcomed. Particular attention is paid to small- and large-scale democratic innovations implemented by local or regional authorities and/or local community groups or active citizens.
11:20 | Networks, place-based leadership and territorial efficacy: enhancing local participation in Lithuanian municipalities (abstract) |
11:40 | "We were not heard – all had been decided". Participation and safeguarding of urban heritage. (abstract) |
12:00 | Democratization from the Grassroots. Are Locally Active Citizens More Democratic Citizens? (abstract) PRESENTER: Eva Lebedova |
12:20 | The Local Action Group (LAG) in the European Union: an innovative governance mechanism? (abstract) PRESENTER: Miriam de Oliveira Goncalves |
12:40 | In search of good practices in governing the urban commons (abstract) PRESENTER: Adam Polko |
This panel’s topic is the politics of value – the content, variation, interaction, influence, and role of relevant and observable values in compact city policies and political processes. Since the 1990ies, compact city has been a dominant approach to urban planning and development. Yet below its consensual surface, a plurality of values slumber. They emerge when compact city initiatives threaten to alter the urban fabric, challenging some values and interests and strengthening others. Values may thus be in opposition to one another, be related to specific material interests, or they may serve as platforms upon which to build collective goals and policies.
As an object for urban research, values are often overlooked or openly rejected as a significant factor for understanding urban processes. Neither the consensual-oriented communicative planning tradition (Healey, 1996; Innes and Booher, 2010), nor the conflict oriented agonistic pluralism tradition (Mouffe, 2005, 2022) acknowledge the importance of values for understanding urban politics and practices. Seeking to fill this void, McAuliffe and Rogers (2019:302), argue that values are key to understand what drives stakeholders’ struggle for legitimacy in urban governance processes and underline that values may represent a potential bridge between conflict and consensus.
The panel invite scholars interested in exploring the potential of a value pluralism approach to the study of compact city policies and practices. We invite both theoretical and empirical studies endeavoring to explore, identify and define operative values in the compact city, as well as the relation between multiple values. We believe a value pluralism approach is especially applicable to the study of compact cities. On the one hand, densification resonates with the current hegemonic urban, green values highlighting the livability and sustainability of compact living. On the other hand, compact city policies threaten social values and habits people want to maintain, as car-use and suburban living, spurring protests to compact city inspired measures (Vallance et al 2011). In situated contexts, values are also structured by, embedded in, and may inform power relations. Hence, what is at stake is different notions of what it means to live a sustainable life; different opinions of what a sustainable policy should include, and how planning processes should be organized to balance and handle a plurality of values among differently positioned actors. A key point for discussion is if, and in what way, recognition of plural values can serve as a pathway towards more agonistic compact city processes. The panel is open and welcomes papers from all social sciences.
Hege Hofstad (Norwegian Institute for Urban and Regional Research (NIBR), Oslo Metropolitan University, Norway)
14:00 | Coping with change: Discourses of social justice in urban climate governance (abstract) PRESENTER: Hege Hofstad |
14:20 | Inclusive development: Concepts, Measurements, and Application to Cities (abstract) PRESENTER: Cathy Liu |
14:40 | Inclusion, proximity and resilience: three important factors to face new needs and sustainability issues (abstract) |
15:00 | Housing affordability and the reduction of land take (abstract) |
15:20 | Is 15 Minute city concept feasible for critical urban infrastructure (abstract) PRESENTER: Hazal Ertem |
This panel aims to study the effects of transparency policies on local institutions and their citizens. We look for papers addressing impacts in both dimensions: citizens (trust, legitimacy, accountability...) and institutions (organizational reorganization and performance). The general question that this panel would like to address is whether transparency policies, understood as the publication of institutional information, the right of access to information and good governance, have had an impact on the dynamics, structures and functioning of public organizations and whether have had an impact on improving the subjective perception of local institutions by citizens (trust, satisfaction and control). Empirical, qualitative or quantitative papers on institutional and organizational aspects are welcome, as well as papers analyzing citizen elements in relation to the effects of transparency on legitimacy and trust. Work carried out from political science and urban studies will be prioritized, but any approach based on the social sciences (law, sociology, economics...) will be welcomed.
Esther Pano (Universitat de Barcelona/Fundació Carles Pi I Sunyer, Spain)
14:00 | The Determinants of Municipal Transparency: A Meta-Regression Analysis (abstract) PRESENTER: Antonio Tavares |
14:20 | Do people perceive institutional transparency? Determinants of factual and perceived transparency in citizens. (abstract) PRESENTER: Lluís Medir |
14:40 | Information sharing, heterogeneity and functional distrust in intermunicipal cooperation (abstract) PRESENTER: Iris Mercader |
15:00 | Barcelona Protocol: a new tool for algorithmic transparency? (abstract) PRESENTER: Migle Laukyte |
15:20 | Engagement of immigrants in Icelandic society through political participation. (abstract) |
15:40 | From formulation to implementation: a closer look at the multi-level governance in one of Italian “Inner Areas” (abstract) |
Both the COVID pandemic and the war in Ukraine have added pressure to national and local housing systems across Europe. Owners, buyers and especially renters feel the burden of new mobility schemes, energy saving efforts and increasing demand for housing in the cities. This panel should comparatively assess current problems of housing policy across cities in Europe, but also innovative solutions designed for being adopted.
14:00 | Development Without Gentrification: A Study of the Better Neighborhoods, Same Neighbors Initiative in East Oakland, California (abstract) |
14:20 | Justice, inclusion, and right to housing. A practice from Great Geneva (abstract) |
14:40 | Decoding the right to housing claim of the in-between housing network: A series of map-makings of the third-sector-driven, alternative housing initiatives in Brussels (abstract) |
15:00 | Sharing in Swedish coliving: A case study of emergent market driven shared housing forms? (abstract) PRESENTER: Daniela Lazoroska |
15:20 | The Effects of Gentrification-Induced Displacement on Health: A Concept Mapping Study (abstract) |
15:40 | Housing & Habitat: download the past and upload the future. Reflections on innovative solutions. (abstract) |
14:00 | A Preliminary Study on the Suitability of Ground-Based Solar Power Systems from the Viewpoint of Environmental Symbiosis: A Case Study in Taiwan's Counties and Cities (abstract) PRESENTER: Tsai-Lun Chien |
14:20 | Interactive data visualization – a tool for resilient urban planning (abstract) PRESENTER: Sophie Holtkötter |
14:40 | Improving citizen engagement through dataset combinations of flood open data platforms (abstract) PRESENTER: Mahardika Fadmastuti |
15:00 | Campus as a living lab – transformation of isolated academic space (abstract) PRESENTER: Beata Jałocha |
15:20 | Triggering urban and rural energy transitions through cooperatives: the role of inclusiveness (abstract) PRESENTER: Paula Maria Bögel |
15:40 | Towards the Energy-Efficient City: Urban Planning Actions for Better Energy Performance in Taiwan (abstract) PRESENTER: Chengzong Lo |
14:00 | Home comforts during the covid-19 lockdown (abstract) PRESENTER: Valentina Giordano |
14:20 | Getting back together: Reduction of barriers for wellbeing in public transport (abstract) PRESENTER: Martin Schlecht |
14:40 | The "tough" small industrial town: explaining resilience and resistance (abstract) |
15:00 | “Those Who Are Not Crazy Become Crazy, Those Who Are Crazy Become Even Crazier”: Container Life in Croatia (abstract) PRESENTER: Lana Peternel |
15:20 | Uncovering Inequalities in Government-Imposed Counter-COVID-19 Measures (abstract) |
14:00 | The role of urban design and planning in stimulating utilitarian walking - How does the context of a Nordic ‘small city’ matter? (abstract) PRESENTER: Harpa Stefansdottir |
14:20 | The Role of Urban Green Infrastructure when Citizens Face the Challenge of Climate Uncertainty (abstract) PRESENTER: Shiau-Yun Lu |
14:40 | Priorities for urban planning and design: the role of greenery in re-urbanising the contemporary city (abstract) PRESENTER: Carolina Giaimo |
15:00 | Resilience in two neighbor towns at the times of great transformation. (abstract) |
15:20 | Greening the Cities? the case of Forestami, for the Metropolitan Area of Milan (abstract) PRESENTER: Maria Chiara Pastore |
European cities’ influence and confidence have grown in recent decades. City governments have gained new agency, become better networked and developed an increasingly confident sense of shared identity. But the challenges Europe’s cities face seem to grow at an ever faster pace. Climate change, COVID recovery, migration pressures, inequalities, political polarisation, technological change, to name a few, all demand that city leaders work in new (and some say radical) ways. Aware of these challenges, many European cities are collaborating across traditional government, sectoral and territorial boundaries; deepening relations with citizens and forging new political alliances; setting ambitious decarbonisation targets; testing and engaging with post-growth models of development... However, there is also a sense that the limited authority, administrative capacity, and financial resources of cities are major constraints that may ultimately prevent them from meeting the challenges ahead. More research is urgently needed into the causes and effects of these developments. Our shared global challenges call for a complete rethinking of urban life. European cities have long been at the forefront of urban innovation and could lead the way in developing new socioeconomic and governance models and more inclusive and sustainable ways of living. Some large European cities such as Paris, Vienna and Amsterdam show that radical agendas can lead to electoral successes. But smaller, less well-known cities have also shown great appetite and potential for change. Nevertheless, in developing new these new models, cities will need support from national governments, international bodies and civil society organisations, including academia. This panel represents and attempts to answer this call. Beyond the themes and arenas of analysis mentioned above, many other broad questions are relevant in guiding our discussion, for example: what new governance capabilities need to be created? What can European cities learn from one another, and from cities in other global regions, to help them better confront these challenges? Can context specific insights about governance arrangements travel in time and space? What support do European city leaders need to meet the challenges ahead?
14:00 | ‘Beyond GDP’: post-growth experimentation in European cities (abstract) |
14:20 | The governance of climate adaptation in metropolitan areas: emerging issues and insights from three European cases (abstract) |
14:40 | Urban planning for climate neutrality and resilience (abstract) |
15:00 | Urban planning in the framework of the EU Climate Neutrality mission (abstract) PRESENTER: Grazia Concilio |
15:20 | Producing green energy with crops? The empirical study of agrophotovoltaic potential assessment in Tainan city, Taiwan (abstract) PRESENTER: Haoyu Juan |
15:40 | Food self-sufficiency of selected European Functional Urban Areas and metropolitan areas (abstract) PRESENTER: Marta Sylla |
Citizen participation is a key prerequisite for a well-functioning democracy. Therefore, many countries as well as international organisations, such as the EU and OECD, are looking forinnovations to expand participation (OECD, 2017). Recently, it was also understood that more participation is needed to address the shared global challenges (e.g. climate change). Nevertheless, before the “governance era”, a new participatory framework was applied to only a minor extent at the local level. Presently, in many local governments on the one hand, it is assumed that effective decision-making must be based on the cooperation of various – both individual and collective, public and private, formal and informal – stakeholders. In this context, citizens are perceived as important actors whose role should go far beyond than being just ! voters, consultants or information-providers. On the other hand, governance puts emphasis on reinforcing civic engagement by adding to ‘traditional’, based on representative democracy decision-making, other forms of community involvement that allow for a more frequent and broader say (e.g. participatory budgeting). Many of these forms are anchored in participatory and deliberative democracy (Mutz 2006). Finally, within governance there is a visible attempt to include disadvantaged or marginalized groups into governing as well as to focus on new issues and topics such as the environment or sustainable development. The incorporation of more vanguard forms of civic involvement into governance is particularly visible in cities and towns, which can be among others connected with a general wider experience of urban units in implementing democratic innovations. In this context cities, towns, districts, neighbourhoods etc. can be treated as a perfect arena for testing new ideas and as a kind of innovation labs for solutions that can be later applied on a broader scale. In addition, progressing urbanization and climate change force authorities to engage in a broader discussion with their residents. At the same time, however, new, more innovative forms of create important challenges for elected politicians and bureaucrats that often lead to a situation when participative agenda is built on pseudoforms of involvement. Consequently, in many cities, we can observe “business/governance as usual”.
14:00 | EU-led social innovation: lessons from Urban Innovative Actions community initiative (abstract) PRESENTER: Cristiana Rossignolo |
14:20 | Limits to urban climate governance: institutional responses to climate protests in four Scandinavian cities (abstract) PRESENTER: Håvard Haarstad |
14:40 | Nesting Bodies with Climate Governance: The Body of Deliberation in Citizens' Assemblies for Climate Europe (abstract) |
15:00 | Is invited participatory governance suitable for socio-environmental sustainable transitions? Some clues from an inquiry into its tangible and intangible effects (abstract) |
15:20 | The (neglected) role of citizens in achieving sustainable development goals? Sustainable urban development in two Swedish sub-arctic cities in the face of the green transformation (abstract) PRESENTER: Michał Łuszczuk |
This panel explores the changing political economy of a ‘just transition’ to zero-carbon, sustainable cities. We reflect on how new forms of conflicts and dilemmas become manifest in changing patterns of civic engagement, and how these movements interact with political and administrative institutions in their pursuit of ‘green’ politics and 'just transition'. We propose that the ‘just transition’ discourse to this end, requires a concomitant focus on climate and energy justice and related issues of social equity. On the one hand, just transition has to cater for ‘energy justice’ related to those citizens whose livelihoods are affected by and depend on a fossil fuel economy. On the other hand, the transition needs to be compatible with the pursuit of ‘climate justice’ to current and future generations exposed to the social and environmental impacts of a warmer globe. The inherent contradictions and paradoxes in the new ‘green’ political economy raise new issues of citizenship, political participation, and democracy - since a basic societal goal is to enable a broad-based participation of citizens in support of, and not in opposition to, the ‘green’ policies and the social and behavioural changes they seek to promote.
However, confronted by the energy and climate crisis and increasing social inequalities, the moderate political parties, which in the past formed ruling coalitions of most cities, have today lost political support and influence, reflecting a more fragmented political landscape with growth of populist parties and right-wing tendencies. Polarization is manifest in, for example, young people’s movements demanding more radical climate policies, such as Fridays for Future and Extension Rebellion, while other groups protest against restrictions on the fossil-economy on the grounds that such ‘green’ policies adversely affect their mobility, job opportunities, income or different aspects of social welfare. These protests might find support either in ‘left-wing’ green parties or new, more ‘right-wing’ populist parties. Thus, beneath an apparent consensus for a green transition, a diversity of counter-hegemonic discourses and initiatives are cropping up and challenges local political and democratic institutions. Conflicts and antagonisms invoked by the new ‘green’ political economy are reinforced by assertive citizens and powerful stakeholders with direct access to political institutions; each relying on a variety of channels for influencing democratic political decision-making, either through political party channels, direct lobbying, civic engagement, or use of social media or other forms of formal or informal arenas or platforms. Focusing on the changing dynamics of the new ‘green’ political economy, we aim to:
Reflect on new forms of conflicts and dilemmas emerging with ‘green’ politics and how they become manifest in a changing landscape of civic engagementInvestigate forms of citizen engagement in political institutions and decision making at the local levelExplore how local democracy and (collaborative) governance aim to tackle conflicts and political trade-offs - and calls for socially just outcomes for a wide variety of citizens
Einar Braathen (Norwegian Institute for Urban and Regional Research - NIBR, Norway)
14:00 | Contentious Mobility Politics: from successful protest movements to failed political parties - Bergen and Gothenburg compared. (abstract) |
14:20 | The governance of just transition in Upper Silesian coal-mine regions. What about marginalized communities? (abstract) PRESENTER: Artur Ochojski |
14:40 | Late industrialism, environmental conflicts and contested turistification in the southern European city of Siracusa (south east Sicily) (abstract) |
15:00 | Planning for Just Cities with Nature-based Solutions: the Intrinsic Linkage between Sustainability and Socio-environmental Inequalities in San José de Chamanga, Ecuador (abstract) PRESENTER: Samaneh Nickayin |
15:20 | The political economy of a ‘just sustainability transition’: Effective governance, social trust and inequality in Scandinavian cities (abstract) PRESENTER: Trond Vedeld |
15:40 | Increased collaboration and new responsibilities for urban authorities: freight stakeholder involvement in Norway (abstract) |
This panel’s topic is the politics of value – the content, variation, interaction, influence, and role of relevant and observable values in compact city policies and political processes. Since the 1990ies, compact city has been a dominant approach to urban planning and development. Yet below its consensual surface, a plurality of values slumber. They emerge when compact city initiatives threaten to alter the urban fabric, challenging some values and interests and strengthening others. Values may thus be in opposition to one another, be related to specific material interests, or they may serve as platforms upon which to build collective goals and policies.
As an object for urban research, values are often overlooked or openly rejected as a significant factor for understanding urban processes. Neither the consensual-oriented communicative planning tradition (Healey, 1996; Innes and Booher, 2010), nor the conflict oriented agonistic pluralism tradition (Mouffe, 2005, 2022) acknowledge the importance of values for understanding urban politics and practices. Seeking to fill this void, McAuliffe and Rogers (2019:302), argue that values are key to understand what drives stakeholders’ struggle for legitimacy in urban governance processes and underline that values may represent a potential bridge between conflict and consensus.
The panel invite scholars interested in exploring the potential of a value pluralism approach to the study of compact city policies and practices. We invite both theoretical and empirical studies endeavoring to explore, identify and define operative values in the compact city, as well as the relation between multiple values. We believe a value pluralism approach is especially applicable to the study of compact cities. On the one hand, densification resonates with the current hegemonic urban, green values highlighting the livability and sustainability of compact living. On the other hand, compact city policies threaten social values and habits people want to maintain, as car-use and suburban living, spurring protests to compact city inspired measures (Vallance et al 2011). In situated contexts, values are also structured by, embedded in, and may inform power relations. Hence, what is at stake is different notions of what it means to live a sustainable life; different opinions of what a sustainable policy should include, and how planning processes should be organized to balance and handle a plurality of values among differently positioned actors. A key point for discussion is if, and in what way, recognition of plural values can serve as a pathway towards more agonistic compact city processes. The panel is open and welcomes papers from all social sciences.
Håvard Haarstad (Centre for Climate and Energy Transformation, University of Bergen, Norway)
16:20 | Engaging value pluralism in the politics of densification (abstract) PRESENTER: Håvard Haarstad |
16:40 | Dimensions of inequalities across Croatian cities (abstract) PRESENTER: Ivana Rašić |
17:00 | Towards human-centered places – between qualitative research and shaping qualitative urban public spaces (abstract) |
17:20 | The impact of short-term rentals on residential displacement: the case of Croatia (abstract) PRESENTER: Maruška Vizek |
This panel aims to study the effects of transparency policies on local institutions and their citizens. We look for papers addressing impacts in both dimensions: citizens (trust, legitimacy, accountability...) and institutions (organizational reorganization and performance). The general question that this panel would like to address is whether transparency policies, understood as the publication of institutional information, the right of access to information and good governance, have had an impact on the dynamics, structures and functioning of public organizations and whether have had an impact on improving the subjective perception of local institutions by citizens (trust, satisfaction and control). Empirical, qualitative or quantitative papers on institutional and organizational aspects are welcome, as well as papers analyzing citizen elements in relation to the effects of transparency on legitimacy and trust. Work carried out from political science and urban studies will be prioritized, but any approach based on the social sciences (law, sociology, economics...) will be welcomed.
Esther Pano (Universitat de Barcelona/Fundació Carles Pi I Sunyer, Spain)
16:20 | Institutional transparency and gender: determinants and key factors (abstract) PRESENTER: Esther Pano |
16:40 | The organizational determinants of Spanish local councils’ active transparency compliance (abstract) |
17:00 | Proximity bias and effective governance (abstract) PRESENTER: Piotr Lis |
17:20 | Strategies to transform the common space, from the "protagonist participation" of childhood and adolescence: "A Vila do Mañá" (abstract) |
17:40 | Transparency and good government in local government. A two-speed fight against corruption? (abstract) PRESENTER: Agustí Cerrillo-i-Martínez |
16:20 | Renewal of Urban Renewal: Post-Industrial Redevelopment in St. Louis Missouri, USA (abstract) PRESENTER: Robert Lewis |
16:40 | Managing the urban setting in Northern Italy through European Regional Funds (abstract) |
17:00 | The role of soft planning in the Europeanisation of public space in the Lisbon metropolitan area in the 21st century (abstract) PRESENTER: Luís Sanchez Carvalho |
17:20 | Managing regional land use and the problem of collective action – The example of Bonn, Rhein-Sieg and Ahrweiler, Germany (abstract) PRESENTER: Maximiliane Seitz |
17:40 | Territories and ecologies of public space in Lisbon metropolis (abstract) |
16:20 | Smart City Governance Driving "new normal" Transition (abstract) |
16:40 | The smart city of northern Norway: How to combine technology, human capital and collaborative governance in the arctic (abstract) |
17:00 | A Coastal Atlas: Prelude to a Territorial Vision (abstract) PRESENTER: Giambattista Zaccariotto |
17:20 | Digital Placemaking Tools for Strengthening the Development of Towns (abstract) PRESENTER: Aleksandra Djukic |
17:40 | Exploring the adaptive planning regulations and smart mobility solution in Shalun Smart Green Energy Science City (abstract) PRESENTER: Tsai-Ling Shih |
Benjamin Hennig (University of Iceland, Iceland)
Harald Sterly (University of Vienna, Austria)
16:20 | Share and Repair in Cities: What is Agenda for Research and Practice on Circular Urban Resilience? (abstract) PRESENTER: Yuliya Voytenko Palgan |
16:40 | Managing the Fiscal Policy Space in Modern Cities: An Empirical Study of Fiscal Competition in the Context of Spending Volatility (abstract) |
17:00 | The institutionalization of ‘tiny home’ villages in Portland: innovative solution to address homelessness or preclusion of radical housing practices? (abstract) |
17:20 | Non-EU migrants in Prague metropolitan region: segregation patterns and its role for coping with migration from Ukraine. (abstract) PRESENTER: Martin Šimon |
Global environmental and social challenges, such as climate change, biodiversity loss, natural resources use and social equity, urge the need to protect ecosystems and build inclusive societies towards sustainability. Cities and urban systems play a paramount role in achieving a global sustainability transformation by understanding the environmental and social challenges, decision-making processes (e.g., policies, plans) and governance structures. There is a common understanding that current governance models mainly focused on siloed approaches across specialized bureaucracies cannot adequately respond to the challenges and tend to be inefficient in achieving a sustainable and resilient urban environment. A systematic approach between urban governance and complex adaptive system thinking can introduce new perspectives for a sustainable transformation pathway. This is inextricably tied up with understanding the decision-making processes (e.g., policy, plans, programs) and governance issues in urban systems within a new holistic perspective. Public participation in strategic planning for sustainable transformation plays an essential role as well as the understanding of the relationship between the different actors, their interconnection, and their involvement across geographic, institutional, and governance scales. Against this background, the panel aims to discuss the extent to which urban systems tackle sustainability challenges and how it gives new impetus to interdisciplinary policy, planning, and empirical practice. In the context of growing uncertainty, the panel encourages contributions that address urban and regional sustainability within an integrated perspective, through policy, planning, governance, and community involvement lens. The panel also welcomes contributions on how local governments are opening decision-making and planning processes, and how governance arrangements, community empowerment, and participatory decision-making support sustainability transformations. Contributions are also invited on the role of environmental assessment and how it may be used to frame these questions. The panel encourages the submission of reflections from actors responsible for planning and designing for the sustainability and resilience of cities and regions as well as examples and practical case studies of significant challenges facing urban sustainability and resilience, sustainability assessments in governance, planning, and implementation of measures in cities and regions.
16:20 | Overlooked Assets for Port Resilience: Local Actors and Coastal Transformation (abstract) PRESENTER: Hadi El Hage |
16:40 | How land meets water in riparian regeneration projects: building the perspective of a City of the Tagus Estuary (Portugal) (abstract) |
17:00 | Urban soil assessment: Limiting negative environmental impacts and optimising ecological benefits of urban soil transformations. (abstract) PRESENTER: Alexandre Bossard |
17:20 | Decade of climate action and the "Mission" approach towards climate neutrality and adaption in Europe: urban transformations? (abstract) |
17:40 | The potential of computer games for inspiring community action for climate adaptation (abstract) |
European cities’ influence and confidence have grown in recent decades. City governments have gained new agency, become better networked and developed an increasingly confident sense of shared identity. But the challenges Europe’s cities face seem to grow at an ever faster pace. Climate change, COVID recovery, migration pressures, inequalities, political polarisation, technological change, to name a few, all demand that city leaders work in new (and some say radical) ways. Aware of these challenges, many European cities are collaborating across traditional government, sectoral and territorial boundaries; deepening relations with citizens and forging new political alliances; setting ambitious decarbonisation targets; testing and engaging with post-growth models of development... However, there is also a sense that the limited authority, administrative capacity, and financial resources of cities are major constraints that may ultimately prevent them from meeting the challenges ahead. More research is urgently needed into the causes and effects of these developments. Our shared global challenges call for a complete rethinking of urban life. European cities have long been at the forefront of urban innovation and could lead the way in developing new socioeconomic and governance models and more inclusive and sustainable ways of living. Some large European cities such as Paris, Vienna and Amsterdam show that radical agendas can lead to electoral successes. But smaller, less well-known cities have also shown great appetite and potential for change. Nevertheless, in developing new these new models, cities will need support from national governments, international bodies and civil society organisations, including academia. This panel represents and attempts to answer this call. Beyond the themes and arenas of analysis mentioned above, many other broad questions are relevant in guiding our discussion, for example: what new governance capabilities need to be created? What can European cities learn from one another, and from cities in other global regions, to help them better confront these challenges? Can context specific insights about governance arrangements travel in time and space? What support do European city leaders need to meet the challenges ahead?
16:20 | Meeting the urban challenges of the 2020s: the leaders and the levers of European cities (abstract) |
16:40 | Voluntary vs mandatory inter-municipal cooperation: the case of Sustainable Urban Development strategies in Western Sicily, Italy (abstract) PRESENTER: João Igreja |
17:00 | Cities in the European Multilevel System: Institutional and Organisational Factors for addressing challenges and seizing opportunities (abstract) PRESENTER: Benjamin Gröbe |
17:20 | Metropolitan governance in Spain: policy tools and institutionalization challenges (abstract) PRESENTER: Mariona Tomas |
Citizen participation is a key prerequisite for a well-functioning democracy. Therefore, many countries as well as international organisations, such as the EU and OECD, are looking for innovations to expand participation (OECD, 2017). Recently, it was also understood that more participation is needed to address the shared global challenges (e.g. climate change). Nevertheless, before the “governance era”, a new participatory framework was applied to only a minor extent at the local level. Presently, in many local governments on the one hand, it is assumed that effective decision-making must be based on the cooperation of various – both individual and collective, public and private, formal and informal – stakeholders. In this context, citizens are perceived as important actors whose role should go far beyond than being just ! voters, consultants or information-providers. On the other hand, governance puts emphasis on reinforcing civic engagement by adding to ‘traditional’, based on representative democracy decision-making, other forms of community involvement that allow for a more frequent and broader say (e.g. participatory budgeting). Many of these forms are anchored in participatory and deliberative democracy (Mutz 2006). Finally, within governance there is a visible attempt to include disadvantaged or marginalized groups into governing as well as to focus on new issues and topics such as the environment or sustainable development. The incorporation of more vanguard forms of civic involvement into governance is particularly visible in cities and towns, which can be among others connected with a general wider experience of urban units in implementing democratic innovations. In this context cities, towns, districts, neighbourhoods etc. can be treated as a perfect arena for testing new ideas and as a kind of innovation labs for solutions that can be later applied on a broader scale. In addition, progressing urbanization and climate change force authorities to engage in a broader discussion with their residents. At the same time, however, new, more innovative forms of create important challenges for elected politicians and bureaucrats that often lead to a situation when participative agenda is built on pseudoforms of involvement. Consequently, in many cities, we can observe “business/governance as usual”.
16:20 | The City of Bratislava as a Front-Runner in Adopting Innovative Participatory Tools in Slovakia: The Experience with Participatory Budgeting and Participatory Planning (abstract) |
16:40 | Participatory budget in post-socialist cities as a tool for boosting human capital and spatial change. Lessons from Poland (abstract) PRESENTER: Paulina Tobiasz-Lis |
17:00 | Participatory governance for urban resilience (abstract) PRESENTER: Michèle Knodt |
17:20 | The challenging interplay of participatory budgeting and organisational boundaries: Findings from two case studies in Finland (abstract) PRESENTER: Lotta-Maria Sinervo |
17:40 | Enhancing participatory governance solutions in urban planning – The Portuguese case (abstract) PRESENTER: Rusconi Isabella |
16:20 | Different cities, different democracies: Co-production and the spatial governance and planning systems in Europe (abstract) PRESENTER: Francesca Bragaglia |
16:40 | Political participation and social cohesion (abstract) |
17:00 | Educating for democracy by walking: identity, sense of place and sense of belonging. (abstract) |
17:20 | Intergroup contact and community cohesion in European ethnically diverse neighborhoods (abstract) |
17:40 | Public Spaces for Community Resilience: An Empirical Study of Social and Spatial Factors (abstract) PRESENTER: Sahar Asadollahi Asl Zarkhah |
This special session begins with Henk Bouwman, Secretary General of Metrex, The Network of European Metropolitan Regions and Areas who will present A Manifesto for a Metropolitan Europe 2050, aiming at generating debate among Eura members on the role of metropolitan cities and regions in the EU integration project. Filipe Teles, Ivan Tosics, Ignazio Vinci, Karsten Zimmermann will contribute to a first round of discussion, moderated by Valeria Fedeli; a second round will be based on an open debate with feedback from the public, with the aim to involve the EURA community.
Additional info on Metrex Manifesto can be found here: https://www.eurometrex.org/activities/metropolitan-vision-for-europe-2050/
The General Assembly of EURA is the moment in which all participants can get in touch more directly with our association, learn about its aims and achievements and get involved more actively. The general assembly will begin immediately after the Metrex introduction will begin immediately after the Metrex introduction
View this program: with abstractssession overviewtalk overview
09:00 | Unveiling the Challenges of Proximity: Integration of TOD and 15-Minute City Concepts in A Highly Car-dependent City (abstract) PRESENTER: Elif Sezer |
09:20 | A walk in the park: does regular exposure to urban green areas improve wellbeing and reduce emissions? (abstract) PRESENTER: Johanna Raudsepp |
09:40 | Mapping the Elements of the Compact City in a Post-Socialist Neighbourhood: The Case of New Belgrade (abstract) PRESENTER: Nikola Mitrović |
10:00 | Mapping the relationship between Green-Blue-Grey Infrastructure (GBGI) and Quality of Life: A case study of Bristol, UK (abstract) PRESENTER: Harry West |
10:20 | Landscapes as living heritages: the generative role of artistic and creative practices (abstract) PRESENTER: Irene Bianchi |
10:40 | Advancing sustainability action in cities through partnerships (abstract) PRESENTER: Savitri Jetoo |
How can architects, urban designers and stakeholders act responsibly and ethically towards the community they work with and care for the environment they impact upon? How can an architectural and urban theory of care suggest ways to subvert power relations in an era of multiple political, social, and environmental crises? The panel seeks interdisciplinary voices and perspectives to articulate reflections and analyse entanglements between care and modes of spatial production. "Designing civic infrastructures of care" welcomes contributions that discuss ‘civic care’ as a framework for action, a flexible paradigm to articulate the radical politicization of architecture and urban design. The tendency for architects, urban designers and planners to play by and profit from the rules of neoliberalism has demeaned the human capacity for reasoning, care and practicing solidarity against market driven transformation of the built environment. Drawing on the assumption that design cannot be a neutral nor objective process, the panel takes a position against architecture’s subjugation to market forces. Furthermore, it considers mutual care a fundamental value upon which community life is structured. The concept of care is central—or at least should be central—to the process or making the urban because design (at whatever scale) concerns space, and spatial practices are social practices. The way practitioners design and activate urban spaces can often help determine how people, animals and plants share space and who or what is excluded, exploited, welcomed, and cared for. When care underpins the production pf space, alternative economic and social patterns can emerge and spread. We will consider contributions that explore care as a framework for action across different cultural and geographical contexts, re-negotiating the role of the architect and urbanists within the complicated political, social and environmental context we live in.
We hope to bring together high and low theory with practices, cases, experimental projects, inventions, interventions, critiques, stories, perspectives standing opposite centralised political systems and social constructs, producing inclusive and environmentally resilient ways of living. The panel seeks to gather contributions from scholars, theorists, activists, artists, policy makers, architects, and urbanists, bringing together different modes of theory and practices.
09:00 | Tending to the Open Field: Reframing Public Art as the Art of Maintaining Publicness. (abstract) PRESENTER: Hugo Moline |
09:20 | Addressing inclusiveness and care in shaping urban commons_ a pedagogical approach (abstract) PRESENTER: Maria Hadjisoteriou |
09:40 | Doing otherwise: Spatial design as a collective caring practice (abstract) |
10:00 | Entangled Acts. Caring—With the Situated Practitioner (abstract) PRESENTER: Claire McAndrew |
10:20 | Ready-made architectural processes: re-signification of reality as a solution (abstract) |
10:40 | Making as Participation and Provocation: Building and Belonging (abstract) |
11:00 | Architectures of care: mapping practices of social and environmental care in the commons (abstract) |
In many rural regions, the restructuring of employment, services and residence defies traditional concepts of „urbanisation“ and „counter-urbanisation“. Complex patterns of mobility have rendered notions of an urban hierarchy problematic, and the dynamics reshaping rural regions appear to be distinct from overall country-level processes. The concepts of „micropolitan areas“ and „micro-urbanisation“ have been used to describe the regional concentration of employment, services and population that may reflect national hierarchies of scale or alternatively local strategies in response to the pressures of national policies and global forces. In some cases, small regional cities have been found to be drivers of economic growth and socio-cultural renewal in rural regions. In other cases, however, small cities have been seen as „s! ponges“ that draw people and resources from adjacent rural regions, further accelerating rural decline. This session welcomes theoretical and empirical studies on patterns and processes of micro-urbanization in rural regions. Possible topics may include but are not limited to demographic processes, migration patterns, urban-rural mobilities, metropolitan-micropolitan-rural relations, and strategies for community building.
09:00 | Micro-urbanisation in Iceland (abstract) |
09:20 | The 2022 revision of Italian National Strategy for Inner Areas: uncertainty on regional and local paths (abstract) |
09:40 | Contemporary tendencies in migration to small municipalities in Czechia (abstract) |
10:00 | Livable small towns - changing roles (abstract) |
10:20 | Has the time come for small cities in iceland? (abstract) |
10:40 | The aesthetic images of urban spaces and the use of active transport modes – the case of Reykjavik (abstract) PRESENTER: Harpa Stefansdottir |
Benjamin Hennig (University of Iceland, Iceland)
Harald Sterly (University of Vienna, Austria)
09:00 | Urban public spaces as a spaces of resiliance: the case of Ljubljana (abstract) PRESENTER: Katarina Polajnar Horvat |
09:20 | Connecting Climate Resilience to Environmental Justice: A Systematic Review on Current Approaches (abstract) PRESENTER: Virginia Pellerey |
09:40 | Community Resilience – How two different neighbourhoods cope with and recover from the July 2021 flood event (abstract) |
10:00 | The evaluation of climate resilience in high-density Asia cities: A case study in Kaohsiung, Taiwan (abstract) PRESENTER: Yuhsuan Lin |
10:20 | Critical Infrastructures in Climate Change (abstract) |
10:40 | Urban resilience and the sustainable development perspective in the light of current anthropogenic hazards: A systematic review (abstract) PRESENTER: Darja Kobal Grum |
09:00 | Productive soil. The Planning of Activity Sites in the Peri-urban Territory (abstract) |
09:20 | Water and soil. The use of urban afforestation for territorial reconnection (abstract) PRESENTER: Maria Matos Silva |
09:40 | The Multi‐level Governance as key of Planetary Resilience. (abstract) PRESENTER: Jorge Cristino |
10:00 | Institutional factors explaining land use changes: The case of Hessen and North-Rhine-Westphalia (Germany) (abstract) PRESENTER: Katarzyna Szmigiel-Rawska |
10:20 | Urban Climate Resilience Adaptation and Urban Planning Governance in Taiwan : the Institutional Perspective (abstract) PRESENTER: Joel Chiahao Tsou |
This panel seeks ways to promote sustainability transformation in urban governance, planning and everyday lives by exploring the possibilities of eco-social practices. In theory, people reproduce social structures in everyday practices, yet new practices can be seeds for more extensive structural changes. Several researchers, institutional authorities, and politicians argue that we need new ecologically and socially sustainable practices, changing urban institutions and everyday lives. We consider an idea of urban eco-social practices:manifold social, spatial, political and governance practices for a sustainable city. In pursuit of sustainability, cities can create opportunities but also challenges. In the context of sustainability transformation, cities have dual roles in transforming within their own organisation, and in catalysing transformation locally. (Amundsen et al. 2018.) The ways of planning, designing and governing cities, directly and indirectly, affect biodiversity and climate change (de Oliveira et al. 2010). Moreover, the consequences of global warming and biodiversity loss are felt locally as e.g., pollution, floods, water scarcity and heat waves.These consequences interrupt the everyday life and challenge the old practices. Environmental changes and how urban authorities try to solve them also have significant social impacts and bring up contradictory questions that need to be democratically reconciled at the local level.While city politicians and urban authorities try to transform cities' mode of operation toward sustainability, many infrastructural investments can benefit the already well-off, forexample, by increasing sustainability-based gentrification or excluding stigmatised neighbourhoods from sustainability investments. Unfortunately, sustainable urban development can increase injustices, but it should instead support socially just and environmentally sustainable eco-social practices (Kotsila et al., 2023). In contrast to top-down efforts towards sustainability, many bottom-up social movementsare taking place. These include e.g., community gardening, DIY urbanism, or other urban commons. Successful new eco-social practices support citizens’ agency and empowerment.This open panel welcomes presentations examining eco-social practices that are related, for example, to questions of democracy, inclusion, legitimacy, justice, authority, structures,norms, and agency in urban contexts. These can explore empirically and/or theoretically the inter-connectedness of eco-social practices in urban governance or people’s everyday lives.
09:00 | Towards a sustainable city? State-led austerity urbanism and increasing differentiation of distribution of public resources in Tampere, Finland (abstract) |
09:20 | Sowing the seeds of change: empowering teenagers to reflect on, devise and communicate eco-social knowledges and practices (abstract) PRESENTER: Mick Lennon |
09:40 | An Eco-social Practice to Enhance Community Sustainability, Resiliency, and Empowerment (abstract) |
10:00 | Building urban resilience through green regeneration strategies in shrinking Polish cities (abstract) |
10:20 | Community resilience to climate change in small towns. Evidence from the Seine Valley in France (abstract) PRESENTER: Marie Asma Ben Othmen |
10:40 | Home is Where the Tiny House is? Re-framing Downsized Livings Potential (abstract) |
Citizen participation is a key prerequisite for a well-functioning democracy. Therefore, many countries as well as international organisations, such as the EU and OECD, are looking for innovations to expand participation (OECD, 2017). Recently, it was also understood that more participation is needed to address the shared global challenges (e.g. climate change). Nevertheless, before the “governance era”, a new participatory framework was applied to only a minor extent at the local level. Presently, in many local governments on the one hand, it is assumed that effective decision-making must be based on the cooperation of various – both individual and collective, public and private, formal and informal – stakeholders. In this context, citizens are perceived as important actors whose role should go far beyond than being just ! voters, consultants or information-providers. On the other hand, governance puts emphasis on reinforcing civic engagement by adding to ‘traditional’, based on representative democracy decision-making, other forms of community involvement that allow for a more frequent and broader say (e.g. participatory budgeting). Many of these forms are anchored in participatory and deliberative democracy (Mutz 2006). Finally, within governance there is a visible attempt to include disadvantaged or marginalized groups into governing as well as to focus on new issues and topics such as the environment or sustainable development. The incorporation of more vanguard forms of civic involvement into governance is particularly visible in cities and towns, which can be among others connected with a general wider experience of urban units in implementing democratic innovations. In this context cities, towns, districts, neighbourhoods etc. can be treated as a perfect arena for testing new ideas and as a kind of innovation labs for solutions that can be later applied on a broader scale. In addition, progressing urbanization and climate change force authorities to engage in a broader discussion with their residents. At the same time, however, new, more innovative forms of create important challenges for elected politicians and bureaucrats that often lead to a situation when participative agenda is built on pseudoforms of involvement. Consequently, in many cities, we can observe “business/governance as usual”.
09:00 | Is the glass half empty or half full? The potential of informal social engagement in urban areas. (abstract) |
09:20 | Modular Solution of possible Implementation of the direct Election of Mayors in the Czech Republic (abstract) PRESENTER: Petr Jüptner |
09:40 | Questioning social innovation-local institutions nexus: evidence from Veneto and Auplia Regions in Italy (abstract) PRESENTER: Carla Tedesco |
10:00 | Policy dialogue as a tool to foster sustainable transportation policies- A scoping literature review (abstract) |
10:20 | Title: Smart cities, for whom? (abstract) PRESENTER: Charlotte Fridolfsson |
10:40 | Free cities and the fragile system of multilevel governance. The case of Hungary (abstract) |
11:20 | New scenarios for Italy’s historic villages: from regeneration to digitalisation without the excesses of the tourism (abstract) |
11:40 | The impact of the shifts in tourism accommodation structure on housing prices: The case of Croatia (abstract) PRESENTER: Tajana Barbić |
12:00 | The Effect of Tourism Activity on Housing Affordability (abstract) PRESENTER: Tajana Barbić |
12:20 | The Production and Liveability of Space in Cloughjordan Ecovillage, Ireland (abstract) |
11:20 | Urban Sustainability Transition in Turkey: Drivers and Barriers (abstract) PRESENTER: Zeynep Kadirbeyoglu |
11:40 | Analysing the systemic criticality of complex infrastructure systems in Bochum in the case of a pluvial flood disaster (abstract) PRESENTER: Marius Ehrmann |
12:00 | Engaging local identity to mobilize citizens for sustainable transitions (abstract) PRESENTER: Hanne Cecilie Geirbo |
12:20 | Explore the application of Traditional Knowledge in different areas from the perspective of disaster reduction (abstract) PRESENTER: Hung-Wen Cheng |
12:40 | Making sense of flood risk: Divergent frames and policy (in)action in the Milanese case (abstract) |
This panel seeks ways to promote sustainability transformation in urban governance, planning and everyday lives by exploring the possibilities of eco-social practices. In theory, people reproduce social structures in everyday practices, yet new practices can be seeds for more extensive structural changes. Several researchers, institutional authorities, and politicians argue that we need new ecologically and socially sustainable practices, changing urban institutions and everyday lives. We consider an idea of urban eco-social practices: manifold social, spatial, political and governance practices for a sustainable city. In pursuit of sustainability, cities can create opportunities but also challenges. In the context of sustainability transformation, cities have dual roles in transforming within their own organisation, and in catalysing transformation locally. (Amundsen et al. 2018.) The ways of planning, designing and governing cities, directly and indirectly, affect biodiversity and climate change (de Oliveira et al. 2010). Moreover, the consequences of global warming and biodiversity loss are felt locally as e.g., pollution, floods, water scarcity and heat waves. These consequences interrupt the everyday life and challenge the old practices. Environmental changes and how urban authorities try to solve them also have significant social impacts and bring up contradictory questions that need to be democratically reconciled at the local level. While city politicians and urban authorities try to transform cities' mode of operation toward sustainability, many infrastructural investments can benefit the already well-off, for example, by increasing sustainability-based gentrification or excluding stigmatised neighbourhoods from sustainability investments. Unfortunately, sustainable urban development can increase injustices, but it should instead support socially just and environmentally sustainable eco-social practices (Kotsila et al., 2023). In contrast to top-down efforts towards sustainability, many bottom-up social movements are taking place. These include e.g., community gardening, DIY urbanism, or other urban commons. Successful new eco-social practices support citizens’ agency and empowerment. This open panel welcomes presentations examining eco-social practices that are related, for example, to questions of democracy, inclusion, legitimacy, justice, authority, structures, norms, and agency in urban contexts. These can explore empirically and/or theoretically the inter-connectedness of eco-social practices in urban governance or people’s everyday lives.
11:20 | Sustainability in city strategies (abstract) PRESENTER: Anni Jäntti |
11:40 | Building resilient city through urban food self-production: an educational approach (abstract) PRESENTER: Ewa Duda |
12:00 | Temporariness builds Resilience. Thinking about a new notion of space, time and use in the post-pandemic city. The case of Lisbon (abstract) PRESENTER: Alessia Allegri |
12:20 | Why do participatory approaches fail? Advancing sustainable urban development in the European Arctic (abstract) PRESENTER: Katarzyna Radzik-Maruszak |
12:40 | Alternative currency as a tool for community involvement for sustainable development of cities. (abstract) PRESENTER: Piotr Czyż |
13:00 | Perception of ecosystems services. Case study from Lisbon, Portugal (abstract) PRESENTER: Isabel Loupa Ramos |