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Towards a More-than-Human Approach to Smart and Sustainable Urban Development: Designing for Multispecies Justice

Author

Listed:
  • Walter Fieuw

    (QUT Design Lab, School of Design, Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane 4000, Australia
    Deceased 23 January 2021.)

  • Marcus Foth

    (QUT Design Lab, School of Design, Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane 4000, Australia)

  • Glenda Amayo Caldwell

    (QUT Design Lab, School of Architecture and Built Environment, Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane 4000, Australia)

Abstract

The term ‘sustainability’ has become an overused umbrella term that encompasses a range of climate actions and environmental infrastructure investments; however, there is still an urgent need for transformative reform work. Scholars of urban studies have made compelling cases for a more-than-human conceptualisation of urban and environmental planning and also share a common interest in translating theory into practical approaches and implications that recognise (i) our ecological entanglements with planetary systems and (ii) the urgent need for multispecies justice in the reconceptualisation of genuinely sustainable cities. More-than-human sensibility draws on a range of disciplines and encompasses conventional and non-conventional research methods and design approaches. In this article, we offer a horizon scan type of review of key posthuman and more-than-human literature sources at the intersection of urban studies and environmental humanities. The aim of this review is to (i) contribute to the emerging discourse that is starting to operationalise a more-than-human approach to smart and sustainable urban development, and; (ii) to articulate a nascent framework for more-than-human spatial planning policy and practice.

Suggested Citation

  • Walter Fieuw & Marcus Foth & Glenda Amayo Caldwell, 2022. "Towards a More-than-Human Approach to Smart and Sustainable Urban Development: Designing for Multispecies Justice," Sustainability, MDPI, vol. 14(2), pages 1-13, January.
  • Handle: RePEc:gam:jsusta:v:14:y:2022:i:2:p:948-:d:725029
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    References listed on IDEAS

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    1. Tan Yigitcanlar & Marcus Foth & Md. Kamruzzaman, 2019. "Towards Post-Anthropocentric Cities: Reconceptualizing Smart Cities to Evade Urban Ecocide," Journal of Urban Technology, Taylor & Francis Journals, vol. 26(2), pages 147-152, April.
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