1.

Record Nr.

UNINA9910629399003321

Autore

Abosira Mohammed

Titolo

Middle Eastern Cities in a Time of Climate Crisis / / Agnès Deboulet, Waleed Mansour

Pubbl/distr/stampa

Le Caire, : CEDEJ - Égypte/Soudan, 2022

ISBN

2-900956-09-9

Descrizione fisica

1 online resource (240 p.)

Collana

Dossiers du Cedej

Altri autori (Persone)

AlaeddineTala

BadirRomani

BonnefoiFlorian

DebouletAgnès

Díaz-BoneLeón

DorghamyAhmed El

El-GerzawyRagia

FanchetteSylvie

FlorinBénédicte

GarciaIbrahim

GhodbaneDalila

HadyNabeel El

HassanIman

HuybrechtsEric

IbrahimKareem

IskandarLaila

MansourWaleed

MenoretPascal

MousaHeba Attia

SaksoukAbir

SayedSara

SeyamSara

SimsDavid

ZaazaaAhmed

Soggetti

Economics

Environmental Studies

climate change

air pollution

anthropocene

sustainable mobility

waste



cities in transition

architecture and rehabilitation

urban expansions

urban development challenges

social and ecological justice

nature-based solutions

urban governance

Lingua di pubblicazione

Inglese

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Sommario/riassunto

The climate crisis is hitting around the world, including in the Middle East and its cities. Urban regions are exposed to increasingly frequent heat waves and floods that leave decision makers without immediate answers. In the context of this global crisis, this book addresses the need for a better understanding of the current model of urban expansion. Cities are major sources of greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions but they are also celebrated for their contribution to economic growth. The current moment is one of a large paradigm shift as climate change is now recognized as a legitimate public problem. This is especially true for city dwellers, who are increasingly exposed to climate change, the loss of biodiversity and heavy pollution while natural breathing spaces continue to shrink around them. The sixteen chapters of this book do not offer any off-the-rack or technical solutions, but they analyze the urban conundrum and the contribution of cities to the climate crisis. Some chapters focus on individual car ownership, land privatization, waste management and land use changes under the guise of development. Others explore local and contextual answers to urban governance issues. With the support of CEDEJ and the Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung, researchers, experts and civil society actors explore the ongoing transformations of Middle Eastern urban environments and mobilities and question them in relation to the climate crisis. The contributions are based on empirical knowledge gathered in the Nile Delta, the Greater Cairo Region, Riyadh and Beirut. Without concessions to mainstream thinking, this book contributes to a better understanding of urban challenges, climate threats and policy responses in contexts marked by growing environmental inequalities.