000 01626nam a2200181 4500
003 OSt
005 20221007102754.0
007 cr aa aaaaa
008 221007b |||||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
100 _aPotter, Emily
_953917
245 _aContesting imaginaries in the Australian city: Urban planning, public storytelling and the implications/ for climate change
_cEmily Potter
260 _aLondon:
_bSage,
_c2020.
300 _aVol 57, issue 7, 2020: (1536–1552 p.)
520 _aIn Australia, environmental degradation goes hand in hand with exclusionary and mono-vocal tactics of place-making. This article argues that dominant cultural imaginaries inform material and discursive practices of place-making with significant consequence for diverse, inclusive and climate change-responsive urban environments. Urban planning in the modern global city commonly deploys imaginaries in line with neoliberal logics, and this article takes a particular interest in the impact of this on Indigenous Australians, whose original dispossession connects through to current Indigenous urban experiences of exclusion which are set to intensify in the face of increasing climate change. The article explores what urban resilience means in this context, focusing on a case study of urban development in Port Adelaide, South Australia, and broadens the question of dispossession through the forces of global capital to potentially all of humanity in the Anthropocene.
773 0 _08843
_916581
_dLondon Sage Publications Ltd. 1964
_tUrban studies
_x0042-0980
856 _uhttps://doi.org/10.1177/0042098018821304
942 _2ddc
_cART
999 _c13314
_d13314