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Whose City? Whose Nature? Towards Inclusive Nature-based Solution Governance

Tozer, L.; Hörschelmann, K.; Anguelovski, I.; Bulkeley, H.; Lazova, Y.

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Authors

L. Tozer

K. Hörschelmann

I. Anguelovski

H. Bulkeley

Y. Lazova



Abstract

Nature-based solutions have recently been embraced as one route towards simultaneously addressing urban environmental and social problems, but an emerging agenda has sought to ask whether and how the ‘greening’ of cities may actually reinforce inequalities or lead to new forms of social exclusion. Using comparative case-study analysis, this paper examines the extent to which nature-driven stewardship initiatives recognize and redress inequalities. We compare two urban contexts that have undergone significant societal transformations over the last two to three decades: Sofia and Cape Town. The comparison shows how nature-driven stewardship initiatives differentially address deeper roots of environmental, social and racial privilege shaped significantly by post-socialist and post-apartheid transition contexts. Instead of assuming a homogenous ideal of urban nature and focusing on questions of the distribution of urban nature and its access, this paper finds it is important to consider the kinds of social relations that are required to both shape decision-making processes and generate meaningful and diverse values and ways of relating to nature in the city. Furthermore, it finds that inclusive nature-based solution governance recognizes and redresses both inequalities in access and inequalities that perpetuate dominant views about what nature is and for whom nature is produced and maintained.

Citation

Tozer, L., Hörschelmann, K., Anguelovski, I., Bulkeley, H., & Lazova, Y. (2020). Whose City? Whose Nature? Towards Inclusive Nature-based Solution Governance. Cities, 107, Article 102892. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cities.2020.102892

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Jul 22, 2020
Online Publication Date Aug 30, 2020
Publication Date 2020-12
Deposit Date Aug 4, 2020
Publicly Available Date Mar 3, 2022
Journal Cities
Print ISSN 0264-2751
Publisher Elsevier
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 107
Article Number 102892
DOI https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cities.2020.102892

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