17 research outputs found

    Seven challenges for the study of urban movements

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    The article explores the difficulties and opportunities derived from the study of contemporary urban movements through the discussion of seven questions: definition of urban movements; understanding of their social characteristics; assessment of the issues raised by the movements; continuities and novelties in their composition and behavior; political significance; relationship between urban movements and institutions; and the standpoint of the researcher

    Empty Urbanism: the bursting of the Spanish housing bubble

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    The depth of the Spanish housing crisis manifests itself in the collapse of construction activity and in the amount of housing and land stocks. The geography of the crisis shows its widespread nature, and the intensity of the previous bubble explains spatial differences. Resulting from this collapse are some problematic areas of 'empty urbanism'. An enormous land bubble, emerging from the peculiar Spanish urban development model, was a key factor in the impacts - caused by the crisis - on the territory and land-use plans. The crisis has demonstrated the unsustainability of this and the urgency of change in the existing land-use plans

    Impacts of Use and Abuse of Nature in Catalonia with Proposals for Sustainable Management

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    This paper provides an overview of the last 40 years of use, and in many cases abuse, of the natural resources in Catalonia, a country that is representative of European countries in general, and especially those in the Mediterranean region. It analyses the use of natural resources made by mining, agriculture, livestock, logging, fishing, nature tourism, and energy production and consumption. This use results in an ecological footprint, i.e., the productive land and sea surface required to generate the consumed resources and absorb the resulting waste, which is about seven times the amount available, a very high number but very similar to other European countries. This overexploitation of natural resources has a huge impact on land and its different forms of cover, air, and water. For the last 25 years, forests and urban areas have each gained almost 3% more of the territory at the expense of agricultural land; those municipalities bordering the sea have increased their number of inhabitants and activity, and although they only occupy 6.7% of the total surface area, they account for 43.3% of the population; air quality has stabilized since the turn of the century, and there has been some improvement in the state of aquatic ecosystems, but still only 36% are in good condition, while the remainder have suffered morphological changes and different forms of nonpoint source pollution; meanwhile the biodiversity of flora and fauna remains still under threat. Environmental policies do not go far enough so there is a need for revision of the legislation related to environmental impact and the protection of natural areas, flora, and fauna. The promotion of environmental research must be accompanied by environmental education to foster a society which is Land 2021, 10, 144 3 of 53 more knowledgeable, has more control and influence over the decisions that deeply affect it. Indeed, nature conservation goes hand in hand with other social and economic challenges that require a more sustainable vision. Today’s problems with nature derive from the current economic model, which is environmentally unsustainable in that it does not take into account environmental impacts. Lastly, we propose a series of reasonable and feasible priority measures and actions related to each use made of the country’s natural resources, to the impacts they have had, and to their management, in the hope that these can contribute to improving the conservation and management of the environment and biodiversity and move towards sustainability.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio

    Introduction: Social Change, Political Discontent, and Urban Movements in Southern European Cities

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    The increase in inequality and residential segregation is causing an objective worsening of the living conditions of a significant part of the population in the European Mediterranean countries. In large cities, this is particularly tangible in job insecurity, reduction of household income, difficulties in accessing housing, energy poverty, and even to adequate access to food. In European Mediterranean countries the city, which has traditionally been considered a space for social redistribution, tends to fragment, to become more unequal, denying a good part of its population the promises of well-being and individual freedom, as well as the possibility of developing autonomous life projects. In the current situation the evolution of collective, solidarity, and inclusive responses to social problems is of crucial importance. Its extension and consolidation may contribute to promoting a plausible alternative both to the submission of public powers to economic interests and to the emerging post-fascism. However, it is clear that the movements defending the freedoms and rights of citizens must face important limitations, both in terms of their capacity for social mobilization and their ability to enhance public policies. Moreover, to consolidate their progress, they must be able not only to resist attacks on citizen rights but also to conceive and offer alternatives for a more equitable, democratic, and sustainable future. To study the potentialities and limitations of these movements, the essays included in this volume are dedicated
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