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Showing 1–16 of 16 results
Advanced filters: Author: Thomas Elmqvist Clear advanced filters
  • Increasing autocratization globally threatens academic freedoms and scientific integrity, undermining core assumptions of sustainability science and environmental policymaking. To stay relevant, sustainability scientists and environmentalists must change how we work and ally with those defending academic freedom.

    • Robert I. McDonald
    • Dagmar Haase
    • David Maddox
    Comments & Opinion
    Nature Sustainability
    P: 1-3
  • A varied repertoire of responses helps manage fluctuations, as in markets. This Perspective argues that society needs to strengthen the diversity of options for responding to disruptions, exploring how this response diversity is expressed, how it can be built and lost, and what we can do to promote it.

    • Brian Walker
    • Anne-Sophie Crépin
    • Jeffrey R. Vincent
    Reviews
    Nature Sustainability
    Volume: 6, P: 621-629
  • A United Nations conference seeks urban sustainability. But the agenda will fail without input from researchers, warn Timon McPhearson and colleagues.

    • Timon McPhearson
    • Susan Parnell
    • Aromar Revi
    Comments & Opinion
    Nature
    Volume: 538, P: 165-166
  • Our planet is rapidly urbanizing. Research has recognized the complexity of city-driven dynamics, but our political realities have yet to catch up. A new narrative of sustainable urban development must become central to global policymaking to help humanity respond to the most pressing social and environmental challenges.

    • Michael Keith
    • Eugenie Birch
    • Martin van der Pütten
    Comments & Opinion
    Nature Sustainability
    Volume: 6, P: 115-117
  • Urban systems must adapt to climatic and other global change. This Perspective uses urban systems to argue that sustainability and resilience are complementary but not interchangeable and that, in some cases, resilience can even render cities unsustainable.

    • Thomas Elmqvist
    • Erik Andersson
    • Carl Folke
    Reviews
    Nature Sustainability
    Volume: 2, P: 267-273
  • The world is urbanizing. This Review assesses impacts of urban growth on habitat and biodiversity, finding direct impacts more in high-income countries while indirect impacts affect more land but are lesser studied.

    • Robert I. McDonald
    • Andressa V. Mansur
    • Carly Ziter
    Reviews
    Nature Sustainability
    Volume: 3, P: 16-24
  • Key insights on needs in urban regional governance - Global urbanization (the increasing concentration in urban settlements of the increasing world population), is a driver and accelerator of shifts in diversity, new cross-scale interactions, decoupling from ecological processes, increasing risk and exposure to shocks. Responding to the challenges of urbanization demands fresh commitments to a city–regional perspective in ways that are explictly embedded in the Anthopocene bio- techno- and noospheres, to extend existing understanding of the city–nature nexus and regional scale. Three key dimensions of cities that constrain or enable constructive, cross scale responses to disturbances and extreme events include 1) shifting diversity, 2) shifting connectivity and modularity, and 3) shifting complexity. These three dimensions are characteristic of current urban processes and offer potential intervention points for local to global action.

    • T. Elmqvist
    • E. Andersson
    • S. Van Der Leeuw
    Comments & OpinionOpen Access
    npj Urban Sustainability
    Volume: 1, P: 1-6