
University of Brawijaya
University of Brawijaya
1 Projects, page 1 of 1
assignment_turned_in Project2019 - 2021Partners:University of Salford, University Federico II of Naples, Hunan Women'S University, South African Cities Network, University of Manchester +36 partnersUniversity of Salford,University Federico II of Naples,Hunan Women'S University,South African Cities Network,University of Manchester,University of California, San Diego,Friends of the Greenbelt Foundation,UN HABITAT,Old Tafo Municipal Assembly,University of Brawijaya,RMIT University,South African Cities Network,Autonomous University of Baja California,ICLEI - Local Govts for Sustainability,University of Brawijaya,Resilient Chennai,United Nations Human Settlements Programme,Chulalongkorn University,Autonomous University of Baja California,University of Naples Federico II,Greater Manchester Combined Authority,Chulalongkorn University,RMIT,Old Tafo Municipal Assembly,Urban Vitality,RMIT,Federal University of Minas Gerais,Resilient Chennai,Ain Shams University,Greater Manchester Combined Authority,Hunan City University,Ain Shams University,Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais,Hunan University,Finnish Environment Institute,University of California, San Diego,Urban Vitality,Resilient Chennai,Finnish Environment Institute,ICLEI - Local Govts for Sustainability,United Nations Human Settlements Program (UNHabitat)Funder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: NE/S013172/1Funder Contribution: 322,567 GBPFrom space, the human impact on the planet is seen by the spread of cities; but the cities themselves are spreading into much larger territories, amorphous sprawling areas between and surrounding cities - i.e. the 'peri-urban'. Arguably, the planet has not only entered the Anthropocene, but also a 'Peri-cene': a global human-environment system shaped by peri-urbanization. Around the world the peri-urban displays many characteristics: global hubs and local enclaves, sprawl and disorder, disruption of communities and livelihoods, and in particular, growing climate risks and ecological disruption. Peri-urbanisation is both a material process of land-use change and impact, and a human process of social, economic, political, and cultural transitions: whether informal or planned, intensive or extensive, the peri-urban is critical to the provision of urban food, energy and water. In turn, understanding peri-urbanisation is critical to three Sustainable Development Goals: Goal 11 on Sustainable Cities and Communities, Goal 13 on Climate Action, and Goal 15 for Life on Land. The PERI-CENE project will provide the first ever comprehensive assessment of peri-urbanisation climate impacts, risks and vulnerabilities. It will provide a global typology and global assessment with an inter-active peri-urban analysis tool. It builds an interactive Living Lab with 18 city-regions from around the world, and explores deeper issues in two case studies. The PERI-CENE then develops forward pathways to be scaleable and transferable.
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