Difference between revisions of "Ecological perspective"

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[[Category:Safety]]
= Ecological perspective =
 
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[[Category:Social]]
The '''“ecological” perspective''' refers to the question of what happens socially as a consequence of the exposure of people to built environments<ref>W. Michelson: Influence of sociology on urban design. In: T. Banerjee/A. Loukaitou-Sideris(eds.): Companion to Urban Design. London/New York: Routledge, 2011, pp. 125-136. </ref>. Ecosystems including humans living in cities and urban environments are characterized by specific interactions. ”Urban ecology” describes the relationships between human and ecological processes and how they can co-exist. Societies and urban planners are increasingly challenged to put additional efforts in developing sustainable, resource-friendly and less resource-dependent systems to ensure long-term functioning of the urban ecosystems.
 
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[[File:ae.png|25px|right|This is a page providing background in a specific field of expertise]]
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Urban structure has an impact on social processes. The '''“ecological” perspective''' in urban sociology explores what happens in social terms as a consequence of the exposure of people to built environment.<ref>Michelson W.: Influence of Sociology on Urban Design, in: Banerjee T./Loukaitou-Sideris A.(eds.): Companion to Urban Design. London/New York: Routledge, 2011, 125-136. </ref> Ecosystems, including humans living in cities and urban environments, are characterised by specific interactions.
   
 
== Security related aspects and benefits ==
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*Environmental consequences from, for example new buildings/installations, influence citizens’ perception that, in turn influences social behaviour and reaction to both risk and security measures.
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*This is especially challenging when planning ‘secure’ urban area and infrastructure. Secure urban design must be socially and ecologically sound.
 
*[[Urban planning]] is particularly forced to consider sustainable concepts to safeguard public health by reducing health risks or technical [[risk|risks]], but also intentional risks such as crime and terrorism emerging from the built environment.
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*Further security related ecological factors resulting from built environments are climate change and weather related [[Natural threat|natural hazards]], demographic changes, population growth, urbanisation, increasing mobility, and rising propagation speed of threats. They are considered to pose major threats to society, its functioning and the built environment itself, or cause shifts in geographic scale of threats and disasters. <ref>Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD): Emerging Risks in the 21st Century. An Agenda for Action.Paris: OECD Publication Service, 2003. Retrieved from http://www.unisdr.org/eng/library/Literature/7754.pdf [last access: 2011-01-28]; International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies (IFRC): World Disasters Report 2010 - Focus on Urban Risks. Geneva: IFRC Publication Service, 2010. Retrieved from: http://www.ifrc.org/Global/Publications/disasters/WDR/WDR2010-full.pdf [last access: 2011-07-18].</ref>
   
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==Approaches how to address it==
== Security-related aspects ==
 
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*Consider and use sustainable material;
Urban planning is particularly forced to consider sustainable concepts to safeguard public health by reducing health risks or technical risks emerging from the built environment. Climate change is worldwide perceived to pose new threats to societies and cause shifts
 
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*Prefer environmentally and ecologically sound material and construction concepts;
This can involve a variety of security-related aspects, such as exclusion of specific social groups ([[Cultural_criminology|cultural criminology]]; [["designing out" approach]]);
 
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*Consider secure urban area and new planning concepts to be socially (and ecologically) sound;
 
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*Consider ecological concepts in technical projects/solutions;
==add.==
 
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*Consider future social and environmental needs.
   
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==Related subjects==
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* [[Cultural_criminology|Cultural criminology]]
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* [[Designing out approach]]
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* [[Designing in|Designing in]]
   
 
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Latest revision as of 10:55, 13 June 2013

This is a page providing background in a specific field of expertise

Urban structure has an impact on social processes. The “ecological” perspective in urban sociology explores what happens in social terms as a consequence of the exposure of people to built environment.[1] Ecosystems, including humans living in cities and urban environments, are characterised by specific interactions.

Security related aspects and benefits

  • Environmental consequences from, for example new buildings/installations, influence citizens’ perception that, in turn influences social behaviour and reaction to both risk and security measures.
  • This is especially challenging when planning ‘secure’ urban area and infrastructure. Secure urban design must be socially and ecologically sound.
  • Urban planning is particularly forced to consider sustainable concepts to safeguard public health by reducing health risks or technical risks, but also intentional risks such as crime and terrorism emerging from the built environment.
  • Further security related ecological factors resulting from built environments are climate change and weather related natural hazards, demographic changes, population growth, urbanisation, increasing mobility, and rising propagation speed of threats. They are considered to pose major threats to society, its functioning and the built environment itself, or cause shifts in geographic scale of threats and disasters. [2]

Approaches how to address it

  • Consider and use sustainable material;
  • Prefer environmentally and ecologically sound material and construction concepts;
  • Consider secure urban area and new planning concepts to be socially (and ecologically) sound;
  • Consider ecological concepts in technical projects/solutions;
  • Consider future social and environmental needs.

Related subjects

Footnotes and references

  1. Michelson W.: Influence of Sociology on Urban Design, in: Banerjee T./Loukaitou-Sideris A.(eds.): Companion to Urban Design. London/New York: Routledge, 2011, 125-136.
  2. Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD): Emerging Risks in the 21st Century. An Agenda for Action.Paris: OECD Publication Service, 2003. Retrieved from http://www.unisdr.org/eng/library/Literature/7754.pdf [last access: 2011-01-28]; International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies (IFRC): World Disasters Report 2010 - Focus on Urban Risks. Geneva: IFRC Publication Service, 2010. Retrieved from: http://www.ifrc.org/Global/Publications/disasters/WDR/WDR2010-full.pdf [last access: 2011-07-18].