توضیحاتی در مورد کتاب Volume 4: Policy and Planning
نام کتاب : Volume 4: Policy and Planning
عنوان ترجمه شده به فارسی : جلد 4: سیاست و برنامه ریزی
سری :
نویسندگان : Pierre Filion (editor), Brian Doucet (editor), Rianne van Melik (editor)
ناشر : Bristol University Press
سال نشر : 2021
تعداد صفحات : 268
ISBN (شابک) : 9781529219067
زبان کتاب : English
فرمت کتاب : pdf
حجم کتاب : 13 مگابایت
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فهرست مطالب :
Front Cover\nSeries\nVolume 4: Policy and Planning\nCopyright information\nTable of contents\nList of Figures and Tables\nNotes on Contributors\nAcknowledgments\nPreface to All Four Volumes of Global Reflections on COVID-19 and Urban Inequalities\nOne Introduction: Policy Making in the Face of Uncertainty and Inequality\n Introduction\n Public policy challenges\n The pandemic exposes cracks in the social edifice\n The time frames of the pandemic\n COVID-19 and the city\n References\nPart I COVID-19 and Urban Changes\n Two The Exaggerated Reports of Offices’ Demise: The Strength of Weak Workplace Ties\n Introduction\n Working from home: enablers and constraints\n The attraction and efficiencies of offices\n Conclusion: Offices, residential neighborhoods, and inequality\n Note\n References\n Three Platform Labour in Urban Spaces after COVID-19\n Introduction\n Platforms in contemporary capitalism\n Differences and similarities in reaction to COVID-19\n Urban policy and planning\n Notes\n References\n Four More Cycling and Road Closures, But for Whom and Where?\n Introduction\n Vancouver cycling during COVID-19\n Findings\n Funding and development cost levies\n Lack of representation\n Barriers to participation and representation in decision-making\n Moving forward and shifting gears\n References\n Fiver Governing ‘the Night’ in Post-COVID-19 Lisbon: Challenges, Opportunities, and Uncertainties\n Introduction\n Resilient and insurgent nights during COVID times\n Towards co-creative and participative governance of nightlife in post-COVID-19 Lisbon\n Conclusion: Is nightlife over forever?\n Acknowledgments\n References\n Siz Small Business Owners in Stockholm and the Anti-Lockdown Pandemic Strategy\n Introduction\n The importance of public space during a pandemic\n Reflections on the consequences of the anti-lockdown strategy\n The spatial context and increased health risk\n The economic impact on different business sectors\n The accessibility to governmental support\n The loss of customers when people ‘work from home’\n Conclusion\n References\n Seven Urban Inequalities and the Lived Politics of Resilience\n Introduction\n Pandemics, urban inequalities, and resilience\n From a critique of resilience to a critical deployment of resilience\n The lived politics of resilience\n Towards the ontology of justice\n Note\n References\nPart II The Pandemic, Social Inequality, and Mobilization\n Eight Navigating Socio-Economic Pressures in COVID-19 Urban Kenya: A Relational Geographies’ Perspective\n Introduction\n Changing debt-relations and the emergence of a COVID-19 economy\n Urban-rural relations, gender identities, and intimate (household) relations\n COVID-19 and relational geographies\n References\n Nine On Standby? But for How Long? The Impact of COVID-19 Lockdown Measures on the Urban Poor of Sri Lanka\n The disproportionate impact on the urban informal sector\n The informal sector matters\n Note\n References\n Ten Combatting Older Adult Loneliness: It Takes a (Blended) Village\n Introduction\n Loneliness, social isolation, and social distancing\n Oakridge Seniors Association\n References\n Eleven Kindness More Contagious Than Viruses: An Inclusive and Innovative Response to Inequalities in Ankara\n Introduction\n The governmental response to COVID-19: from a mandatory distribution of tasks to intergovernmental conflict\n The case of Ankara Municipality\n In lieu of a conclusion\n Notes\n References\n Twelve Resisting Disaster Capitalism During COVID-19 in Chile: People Fight Back\n Introduction\n Structural inequalities as root causes of discontent, the context of COVID-19 in Chile\n Resisting responses to COVID-19 effects: a reaction to urban inequalities and slow institutional actions\n Conclusion\n Note\n References\n Thirteen Rapid Deployment of Transport Infrastructure and Urban Social Injustice: The Case of Medellín, Colombia\n Introduction\n Our case and its relevance for urban sustainability\n Sustainability considerations\n Urban justice and the role of transport\n Methodology and results\n Conclusion\n References\nPart III Municipal and Urban Policy Responses\n Fourteen Transnational Experiences of COVID-19: Transferable Lessons for Urban Planning Between the Global South and the Global North\n Introduction\n Pandemic, lockdown, and reopening in four cities\n Governing pandemics: capacity and resilience\n Transferable lessons for planning\n Conclusion\n References\n Fifteen Urban Mobility, Working Culture, and Administration During the COVID-19 Crisis: Adjustments for a Resilient City\n Introduction\n Crisis responses: redistribution of public space\n Crisis response: changes in working culture\n Crisis responses: public transport\n Conclusion\n References\n Sixteen Public Transport Qualities and Inequalities in Pandemic Times\n Introduction\n User experiences and atmospheres\n Challenges, government responses, fare systems\n Future of public transport: long-lasting changes?\n Notes\n References\n Seventeen COVID-19 and the Creative City: Lessons from the UK\n Introduction\n The creative city and inequality\n COVID-19 and failures of creative justice\n New possibilities for urban cultural policy in the age of pandemic\n References\n Eighteen Urban Regional Planning under the Pandemic: The Case of Oslo\n Introduction\n The (intraurban) geographies of the pandemic and related inequalities\n The case of Oslo\n Exploring intraurban COVID-19 impacts and potential explanatory factors across the Oslo region\n Implications for urban and regional planning\n References\n Nineteen Distributing, De-Synchronizing, Digitalizing: Dealing with Milan Transport Inequalities in Post-COVID-19 Society\n Introduction\n Milan 2020 document: tactical strategies to deal with COVID-19\n Two main coexistent perspectives for a more inclusive city\n Conclusion\n Notes\n References\n Twenty The View from the Socio-Spatial Peripheries: Milan, Italy and Toronto, Canada\n Introduction\n The socio-spatial periphery\n COVID-19 in the socio-spatial periphery of Toronto\n COVID-19 in the socio-spatial periphery of Milan\n Conclusion: Critiquing hegemonic planning through a focus on care\n References\n Twenty-One Conclusion: The Pandemic and Beyond\nIndex\nBack Cover