Cover image for Social sustainability in urban areas : communities, connectivity and the urban fabric
Title:
Social sustainability in urban areas : communities, connectivity and the urban fabric
Publication Information:
London ; Washington, DC : Earthscan, 2010
Physical Description:
xvii, 237 p. : ill., maps ; 24 cm.
ISBN:
9781844076741
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30000010234987 HT151 S6213 2010 Open Access Book Book
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Summary

Summary

This groundbreaking new volume on social sustainability offers both critique and creative solutions. It challenges the conventional wisdoms of social sustainability and presents practical examples of projects that will help practitioners to think carefully and innovatively about the situations they are addressing.The book consists of original contributions from academics working in the fields of urban planning, housing, regeneration, transport and international sustainable development. Drawing on case study research gathered in the UK, Europe and Africa, it adopts an original, interdisciplinary approach to both theory and practice, illustrating the challenges and opportunities facing policy-makers and practitioners attempting to develop, manage and maintain sustainable communities. The authors argue that the dominant approach of 'how to do' small scale social sustainability fails to locate it within broader social processes. Ignoring the context not only sustains, but also actively reproduces wider inequalities.The book presents a new, more coherent and more complete approach to issues of social sustainability in urban areas. The book approaches current urban policy discourses in three different ways, represented by three sections: firstly focusing on small places within the urban fabric, secondly addressing the whole urban fabric by examining whether changing urban living and working patterns. The third section explores some of the ways that funding can be secured to achieve the aims of social sustainability and the social planning associated with it.


Author Notes

Tony Manzi is a Principal Lecturer in Housing and the Course Leader for the MA in Housing Practice at the University of Westminster. Karen Lucas is Research Fellow with the Transport Studies Unit at the University of Oxford and former Director of Research for the Centre for Sustainable Development at the University of Westminster. Tony Lloyd Jones is Principal Lecturer in Urban Design and Development at the University of Westminster and Director of Research and Consultancy at the University's Max Lock Centre. Judith Allen is Principal Lecturer in Neighbourhood Management in the School of Architecture and the Built Environment, University of Westminster.


Table of Contents

Tony Manzi and Karen Lucas and Tony Lloyd-Jones and Judith AllenTony ManziNick BaileyJudith Allen and Tony Lloyd-JonesCatalina GandelsonasSuzy NelsonKaren Lucas and Derek Halden and Sarah WixeyPeter White and Georgina Christodoulou and Roger Mackett and Helena Titheridge and Roselle Thoreau and John PolakChris MarshAdam EldridgeAdam Smith
List of Figures, Tables and Boxp. vii
List of Contributorsp. ix
List of Acronyms and Abbreviationsp. xiii
Introductionp. xv
1 Understanding Social Sustainability: Key Concepts and Developments in Theory and Practicep. 1
Section 1 Communities, Neighbourhoods and the Creation of Locality-based Social Capital
2 Creating Sustainable Neighbourhoods? The Development and Management of Mixed-Income Communitiesp. 35
3 Building Sustainable Communities from the Grassroots: How Community Land Trusts Can Create Social Sustainabilityp. 49
4 Neighbourhood Asset Management: Life Cycles and Learning for Social Sustainabilityp. 65
5 Women's Social Networks and Their Importance in Promoting Sustainable Communitiesp. 83
Section 2 The Role of Place and Connectivity in the Urban Socio-Physical Environment
6 Residential Intensification, Family Housing and Educational Provisionp. 105
7 Transport Planning for Sustainable Communitiesp. 121
8 The Impacts of Teleworking on Sustainability and Travelp. 141
Section 3 Regeneration and Economic Development
9 Planning Obligations and Social Sustainabilityp. 161
10 The Urban Renaissance and the Night-Time Economy: Who Belongs in the City at Night?p. 183
11 The Relationship Between Major Events, the Urban Fabric and Social Sustainabilityp. 199
12 Conclusions and Observations for Future Practicep. 221
Indexp. 229