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Urban experiments and climate change: securing zero carbon development in Bangalore.

Bulkeley, H.; Castan-Broto, V.

Authors

V. Castan-Broto



Abstract

Climate change is an increasingly important issue on urban policy and research agendas. As this agenda gathers pace, this paper argues for an approach that recognises the critical role of climate change experiments in meditating the response to climate change in the city. Drawing on a case study of a green housing development in the outskirts of Bangalore in India—Towards Zero Carbon Development (T-Zed)—the paper follows the emergence of an experiment in the simultaneous processes of making, maintaining and living low carbon alongside and in between existing infrastructure regimes. It is argued that this experiment has created space for social and technical innovation, reworking notions of urban development in Bangalore. At the same time, it has reconfigured existing urban infrastructure networks through new discourses and practices of urban ecological security, enabling the emergence of a new rhetoric of low carbon living within the city that effectively marries green forms of consumption with urban development. While the experiment serves as a means for modifying urbanism in Bangalore, its results are ambivalent in the context of ongoing inequalities within the city and beyond.

Citation

Bulkeley, H., & Castan-Broto, V. (2014). Urban experiments and climate change: securing zero carbon development in Bangalore. Contemporary Social Science, 9(4), 393-414. https://doi.org/10.1080/21582041.2012.692483

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Jun 27, 2012
Online Publication Date Jul 27, 2012
Publication Date 2014
Deposit Date Oct 17, 2013
Journal Contemporary Social Science
Print ISSN 2158-2041
Electronic ISSN 2158-205X
Publisher Taylor and Francis Group
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 9
Issue 4
Pages 393-414
DOI https://doi.org/10.1080/21582041.2012.692483
Public URL https://durham-repository.worktribe.com/output/1445413