This collection examines why urban environments are key sites for reimagining and reconfiguring human-nature encounters in times and spaces of planetary crisis. Cities constitute powerful and troubling spaces for human-nature intersections. They typically represent the effects of human dominance over nature: humans in control, taming and managing the wildness of ‘nature’ by domesticating it. Children existing in these mostly adult designed and orchestrated creations are often ignored as city dwellers, along with animals who increasingly migrate into urban areas. Yet cities are also sites of innovation and ‘greening’, of critical democracy and renewal, with the most innovative cities including those where children co-create urban environment...
The most inclusive definition of nature is that realm of experience that humans believe is ordinaril...
It is estimated that half of the world’s population now live in urban environments. Urban livi...
It has become a truismdalmost a clichédto note that humans are now a predominantly urban species. Th...
This study is a reaction to the paucity of research on children's aesthetic encounters in living env...
none3siThe twin crises of nature and climate is supported by overwhelming scientific evidence and in...
This article explores children’s consumption of ‘nature’ in culturally diverse urban places. Analysi...
Strong sustainability requires enhanced knowledge and understanding of complex social-ecological int...
Since the Enlightenment, cities have been considered as exemplary spaces of human achievement. Techn...
This chapter explores how we can embrace wildness in cities, using imaginative design solutions to c...
This article explores and reconsiders the view of children’s encounters with place as central to a p...
The particular attention to enviromental and open spaces is the core of the book, that orients the a...
Urban residents, in part due to issues of urban form and lifestyle choice, have become both physical...
Urban Ecology: An Introduction seeks to open the reader’s mind and eyes to the way in which nature p...
While it is clear that contact with nature is vital to the health, happiness and well-being of urban...
This book elaborates the need, in a rapidly urbanizing world, for recognition of the ecological comm...
The most inclusive definition of nature is that realm of experience that humans believe is ordinaril...
It is estimated that half of the world’s population now live in urban environments. Urban livi...
It has become a truismdalmost a clichédto note that humans are now a predominantly urban species. Th...
This study is a reaction to the paucity of research on children's aesthetic encounters in living env...
none3siThe twin crises of nature and climate is supported by overwhelming scientific evidence and in...
This article explores children’s consumption of ‘nature’ in culturally diverse urban places. Analysi...
Strong sustainability requires enhanced knowledge and understanding of complex social-ecological int...
Since the Enlightenment, cities have been considered as exemplary spaces of human achievement. Techn...
This chapter explores how we can embrace wildness in cities, using imaginative design solutions to c...
This article explores and reconsiders the view of children’s encounters with place as central to a p...
The particular attention to enviromental and open spaces is the core of the book, that orients the a...
Urban residents, in part due to issues of urban form and lifestyle choice, have become both physical...
Urban Ecology: An Introduction seeks to open the reader’s mind and eyes to the way in which nature p...
While it is clear that contact with nature is vital to the health, happiness and well-being of urban...
This book elaborates the need, in a rapidly urbanizing world, for recognition of the ecological comm...
The most inclusive definition of nature is that realm of experience that humans believe is ordinaril...
It is estimated that half of the world’s population now live in urban environments. Urban livi...
It has become a truismdalmost a clichédto note that humans are now a predominantly urban species. Th...