Envisioning carbon-smart and just urban green infrastructure

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Standard

Envisioning carbon-smart and just urban green infrastructure. / Lampinen, Jussi; García Antúnez, Oriol; Olafsson, Anton Stahl; Kavanagh, Kayleigh C.; Gulsrud, Natalie Marie; Raymond, Christopher M.

I: Urban Forestry & Urban Greening, Bind 75, 127682, 2022.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Lampinen, J, García Antúnez, O, Olafsson, AS, Kavanagh, KC, Gulsrud, NM & Raymond, CM 2022, 'Envisioning carbon-smart and just urban green infrastructure', Urban Forestry & Urban Greening, bind 75, 127682. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ufug.2022.127682

APA

Lampinen, J., García Antúnez, O., Olafsson, A. S., Kavanagh, K. C., Gulsrud, N. M., & Raymond, C. M. (2022). Envisioning carbon-smart and just urban green infrastructure. Urban Forestry & Urban Greening, 75, [127682]. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ufug.2022.127682

Vancouver

Lampinen J, García Antúnez O, Olafsson AS, Kavanagh KC, Gulsrud NM, Raymond CM. Envisioning carbon-smart and just urban green infrastructure. Urban Forestry & Urban Greening. 2022;75. 127682. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ufug.2022.127682

Author

Lampinen, Jussi ; García Antúnez, Oriol ; Olafsson, Anton Stahl ; Kavanagh, Kayleigh C. ; Gulsrud, Natalie Marie ; Raymond, Christopher M. / Envisioning carbon-smart and just urban green infrastructure. I: Urban Forestry & Urban Greening. 2022 ; Bind 75.

Bibtex

@article{393b32eea5d840fcaf8c460fdba27e69,
title = "Envisioning carbon-smart and just urban green infrastructure",
abstract = "To address the inter-connected climate and biodiversity crises, it is crucial to understand how multifunctional urban green infrastructure (UGI) is perceived to contribute to carbon neutrality, biodiversity, human well-being, and justice outcomes in cities. We explore how urban residents, including youth, associate carbon-related meanings with multifunctional UGI and how these meanings relate to co-benefits to biodiversity, well-being, and broader sustainability outcomes. Our findings are based on a survey distributed among urban residents of Helsinki, Finland (n = 487) and reveal how carbon-related meanings of UGI manifest at different levels of abstraction, agency, and scale, and incorporate community values and concerns attributed to the planning, features, functions, and transformational dimensions of UGI. Core carbon-related meanings of UGI emphasize either actions towards sustainability, carbon neutrality, biodiversity, or unfamiliarity towards such meanings. Perceived justice concerns and the socio-demographic contexts of the respondents covaried with carbon-related meanings associated with UGI. The results illustrate community perceptions of how it is not only possible, but rather expected, that multifunctional UGI is harnessed to tackle climate change, human well-being, and biodiversity loss in cities. Challenges for implementing the carbon-related benefits of UGI include navigating the different expectations placed on UGI and including residents with diverse socio-economic backgrounds during the process. Our findings contribute to a holistic understanding of how multifunctional UGI can help bridge policy agendas related to carbon neutrality, biodiversity protection, and human well-being that cities can implement when aiming for sustainable, just, and socially acceptable transitions towards a good Anthropocene.",
author = "Jussi Lampinen and {Garc{\'i}a Ant{\'u}nez}, Oriol and Olafsson, {Anton Stahl} and Kavanagh, {Kayleigh C.} and Gulsrud, {Natalie Marie} and Raymond, {Christopher M.}",
year = "2022",
doi = "10.1016/j.ufug.2022.127682",
language = "English",
volume = "75",
journal = "Urban Forestry & Urban Greening",
issn = "1618-8667",
publisher = "Elsevier GmbH - Urban und Fischer",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Envisioning carbon-smart and just urban green infrastructure

AU - Lampinen, Jussi

AU - García Antúnez, Oriol

AU - Olafsson, Anton Stahl

AU - Kavanagh, Kayleigh C.

AU - Gulsrud, Natalie Marie

AU - Raymond, Christopher M.

PY - 2022

Y1 - 2022

N2 - To address the inter-connected climate and biodiversity crises, it is crucial to understand how multifunctional urban green infrastructure (UGI) is perceived to contribute to carbon neutrality, biodiversity, human well-being, and justice outcomes in cities. We explore how urban residents, including youth, associate carbon-related meanings with multifunctional UGI and how these meanings relate to co-benefits to biodiversity, well-being, and broader sustainability outcomes. Our findings are based on a survey distributed among urban residents of Helsinki, Finland (n = 487) and reveal how carbon-related meanings of UGI manifest at different levels of abstraction, agency, and scale, and incorporate community values and concerns attributed to the planning, features, functions, and transformational dimensions of UGI. Core carbon-related meanings of UGI emphasize either actions towards sustainability, carbon neutrality, biodiversity, or unfamiliarity towards such meanings. Perceived justice concerns and the socio-demographic contexts of the respondents covaried with carbon-related meanings associated with UGI. The results illustrate community perceptions of how it is not only possible, but rather expected, that multifunctional UGI is harnessed to tackle climate change, human well-being, and biodiversity loss in cities. Challenges for implementing the carbon-related benefits of UGI include navigating the different expectations placed on UGI and including residents with diverse socio-economic backgrounds during the process. Our findings contribute to a holistic understanding of how multifunctional UGI can help bridge policy agendas related to carbon neutrality, biodiversity protection, and human well-being that cities can implement when aiming for sustainable, just, and socially acceptable transitions towards a good Anthropocene.

AB - To address the inter-connected climate and biodiversity crises, it is crucial to understand how multifunctional urban green infrastructure (UGI) is perceived to contribute to carbon neutrality, biodiversity, human well-being, and justice outcomes in cities. We explore how urban residents, including youth, associate carbon-related meanings with multifunctional UGI and how these meanings relate to co-benefits to biodiversity, well-being, and broader sustainability outcomes. Our findings are based on a survey distributed among urban residents of Helsinki, Finland (n = 487) and reveal how carbon-related meanings of UGI manifest at different levels of abstraction, agency, and scale, and incorporate community values and concerns attributed to the planning, features, functions, and transformational dimensions of UGI. Core carbon-related meanings of UGI emphasize either actions towards sustainability, carbon neutrality, biodiversity, or unfamiliarity towards such meanings. Perceived justice concerns and the socio-demographic contexts of the respondents covaried with carbon-related meanings associated with UGI. The results illustrate community perceptions of how it is not only possible, but rather expected, that multifunctional UGI is harnessed to tackle climate change, human well-being, and biodiversity loss in cities. Challenges for implementing the carbon-related benefits of UGI include navigating the different expectations placed on UGI and including residents with diverse socio-economic backgrounds during the process. Our findings contribute to a holistic understanding of how multifunctional UGI can help bridge policy agendas related to carbon neutrality, biodiversity protection, and human well-being that cities can implement when aiming for sustainable, just, and socially acceptable transitions towards a good Anthropocene.

U2 - 10.1016/j.ufug.2022.127682

DO - 10.1016/j.ufug.2022.127682

M3 - Journal article

VL - 75

JO - Urban Forestry & Urban Greening

JF - Urban Forestry & Urban Greening

SN - 1618-8667

M1 - 127682

ER -

ID: 316055278