Johannes Stripple
Associate Professor | Senior Lecturer | Principal Investigator BECC
Climate Smart City : New Cultural Political Economies in the Making in Malmö, Sweden
Author
Summary, in English
The question of how the urgent transformation in fossil fuel based economies might be realised has come to occupy an increasingly prominent place within the social sciences. The challenge here is often cast in terms of how one or more existing system can be replaced by alternatives in which the carbon content has been removed or at least diluted by purposeful interventions. Here we approach the question from a different angle, asking how ongoing transformations in critical systems (in this case energy) are or may be leveraged in relation to climate change. We take as our focus the emergence of the smart city and examine a case in which the notion of the smart city has become wedded to the ambition for a low carbon city: Malmö, Sweden. As commentators suggest, the growth of the smart city reflects a capitalist reflex to develop new waves of investment to realise new arenas for capital accumulation in the city. Yet shifting from this broad political economy diagnosis, we argue that there is a need to attend to the ways in which climate is imbued and embedded in the smart city and how this in turn enables and constrains low carbon transitions.
Department/s
- Department of Political Science
- BECC: Biodiversity and Ecosystem services in a Changing Climate
Publishing year
2021
Language
English
Pages
937-950
Publication/Series
New Political Economy
Volume
26
Issue
6
Document type
Journal article
Publisher
Taylor & Francis
Topic
- Political Science
Keywords
- accumulation
- Climate
- pathways
- smart
- urban
Status
Published
ISBN/ISSN/Other
- ISSN: 1356-3467