COVID-19 has stressed the condition of radical uncertainty that increasingly characterises our times and compels cities to learn new ways to cope with unexpected global urban challenges. The volume proposes preparedness as a key concept in urban geography, planning, and policy, inviting international scholars to discuss its pros and cons.
Firstly, it builds a critical theoretical framework around the concept of preparedness in relation to the COVID-19 effects and other interconnected crises. Then, the authors put at work and redefine preparedness, starting from worldwide surveys, research experiences, public discourses and spatial strategies analysis in Europe and, more extensively, in Italy. Finally, the closing section goes beyond the view of preparedness as an emergency tool, proposing to interpret it more broadly as a technology supporting a sustainable urban transition.
The book mainly targets academics in urban planning, policy, and geography. However, the prominence of the topic of preparedness makes the volume an essential reading not only within social sciences but further in engineering, basic sciences, and life science. In addition, the book provides directions to practitioners and civic leaders in supporting cities and regions to prepare themselves in the face of pandemics and unpredictable socio-environmental shocks.
Author(s): Simonetta Armondi, Alessandro Balducci, Martina Bovo, Beatrice Galimberti
Series: Routledge Advances in Regional Economics, Science and Policy
Publisher: Routledge
Year: 2022
Language: English
Pages: 280
City: London
Cover
Half Title
Series
Title
Copyright
Contents
List of figures
List of contributors
Acknowledgements
1 Introduction
Part I Interpretations: a theoretical framework and emerging territorial issues
2 The key of preparedness
3 Supporting urban planning to stay with uncertainty: preparedness, care, and antifragility
4 Preparedness as a technology of the imagination: interview with Andrew Lakoff and Frédéric Keck
5 Spatial strategies for getting ready? The weak linkage amid preparedness and urban policy
Part II Observations: experiences of (un)preparedness in Europe
6 What future for European cities after COVID-19? An international survey
7 Analysis of Madrid’s urban policies in the period 2020–2021: towards a more resilient post-coronavirus capital?
8 The impacts of the sanitary crisis on the French urban areas and their likely effects on urban policies
9 COVID-19 in the Lombardy region: socio-spatial peripheries and forgotten densities of long-term care
10 Urban and manufacturing after the pandemic, preparing a new ground for the productive city
11 Distributing, desynchronising, digitalising: towards a new mobile urbanity in the COVID-19 era
12 Changing uses in public spaces: dehors’ supporting measures in Italy in COVID-19 times
13 Housing as a basic infrastructure against risks: the case of COVID-19 housing support measures in Greece
14 Governing pandemics at the local level: the case of COVID-19 in Albania
15 Schools and cities: spaces for solutions
16 Access to essential services: migrants’ landing during lockdown
17 Urban peripheries after COVID-19 in Italy
18 Afterword: preparedness supporting the transition
Index