학술논문

Infrastructure That Connects/Infrastructure That Divides.
Document Type
Article
Source
Planning Theory & Practice. Feb2023, Vol. 24 Issue 1, p99-130. 32p.
Subject
*PUBLIC spaces
*SUBURBS
*CITY dwellers
*URBAN ecology
*JIM Crow laws
*GREENHOUSE gases
*INTERNATIONAL economic assistance
Language
ISSN
1464-9357
Abstract
b Astrid R.N. Haas B Promoting Essential Green Infrastructure by Acknowledging Local Needs in Praxis b Ian Mell and Tenley Conway B Climate Resilient Infrastructure - Connecting and Dividing the Cities of the Future b Cathy Oke Infrastructure That Connects/Infrastructure That Divides We live in an age of infrastructure, we are told repeatedly (Dodson, [3]). B Contents b B Introduction: Infrastructure That Connects/Infrastructure That Divides b Matti Siemiatycki and Kevin Ward B I "Rail Linor Itu Pare" i : Railways as Infrastructural Borders in Guwahati, Northeast India b Prerona Das, Tim Bunnell and James Sidaway B Infrastructures of Water and Ideas: The Struggle Against Environmental Racism in Black Urban Regimes b Alesia Montgomery B Infrastructures of Race b Sawyer Phinney B Whose Infrastructure is it Anyway? Large-scale, networked, colonial-derived infrastructure such as Indian railways (that in turn connect with planetary-spanning transport infrastructures) thus assume another local function and meaning as a dividing infrastructure. Trees and naturalized habitats are also being categorized as green infrastructure, since they serve the same function as the built grey infrastructure that stores water or retains hillsides - only in many instances the green infrastructure is more successful. [Extracted from the article]