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Contesting Megaprojects: Complex Impacts, Urban Disruption and the Quest for Sustainability [Hardback]

  • Formāts: Hardback, 265 pages, height x width: 235x155 mm, 17 Illustrations, color; 1 Illustrations, black and white; X, 265 p. 18 illus., 17 illus. in color., 1 Hardback
  • Izdošanas datums: 30-Sep-2025
  • Izdevniecība: Springer International Publishing AG
  • ISBN-10: 3031983815
  • ISBN-13: 9783031983818
  • Hardback
  • Cena: 60,29 €*
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  • Formāts: Hardback, 265 pages, height x width: 235x155 mm, 17 Illustrations, color; 1 Illustrations, black and white; X, 265 p. 18 illus., 17 illus. in color., 1 Hardback
  • Izdošanas datums: 30-Sep-2025
  • Izdevniecība: Springer International Publishing AG
  • ISBN-10: 3031983815
  • ISBN-13: 9783031983818
Megaprojects are not merely transformative, but rather inherently disruptive. They are incompatible with any approach to urban sustainability that prioritizes the well-being of urbanites and the boundaries of the Earth system. In fact, megaprojects undermine efforts to tackle the global impacts associated with both the destructive creation of capitalism and the new climate regime.



The reason for this state of affairs is not cost overruns and poor megaproject management, but the disruptive impacts that megaprojects have on urban areas. This book emphasizes the megaproject impacts imperative: the importance of identifying impacts as a prerequisite for critically assessing whether megaprojects should be built.



Drawing on 18 megaprojects in 16 cities around the world (inter alia, Istanbul, Hong Kong, Abu Dhabi, Barcelona, Boston, New York and Shanghai), Contesting Megaprojects illustrates urban-regional trajectories over the past fifty years. These trajectories show the coexistence of property development, culture, and iconic architecture, together with a more recent interest in science and technology, innovation, and sustainability as strategies to foster urban competitiveness.



Megaprojects cause massive disruptions everywhere, and the book offers a typology of megaproject impacts: socioeconomic, environmental, spatial, political and geopolitical, financial, cultural and systemic. As a response to this emerging complex web of interrelated megaproject impacts (disruptive complexity), the book develops the concept of complex sustainability, a transdisciplinary approach to urban sustainability, through socioeconomic sustainability and deep sustainability.



The critical outlook of this book elicits fundamental debates around capitalist development: trickle-down urbanism, spectacularization, high-tech innovation and AI, planetary boundaries, global risks, resilience, the right to the city, geopolitics, democracy, prosperity, and power. Contesting Megaprojects can help urban scholars and analysts, practitioners, policymakers, and residents of cities better understand the complex impacts of urban megaprojects, their magnitude and consequences, and identify courses of analysis and action toward a more sustainable and just future.
1 An Age of Megaprojects.- 2 Trajectories and Transitions.- 3 Landscapes
of Disruption.- 4 Emblems of Capitalism.- 5 High-Tech Megaprojects.- 6
Greening Megaprojects.- 7 Disruptive Impacts.- 8 Complex Sustainability.- 9
Contesting Megaprojects.
Gerardo del Cerro Santamarķa is a Senior Research Scholar, Professor, Author, Mentor and International Advisor in New York. He has taught at Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Skidmore College and The Cooper Union for the Advancement of Science and Art in Manhattan, where he was Founding Director and Senior Executive Director of Strategic Planning and Innovation and Research Professor of Planning and Megaprojects for twenty-three years. He has also been a Visiting Scholar at Columbia University, London School of Economics and University College London, among other institutions. Del Cerro is a U.S. Fulbright fellow, a former Program Evaluation Director (Gateway Engineering Coalition) at the U.S. National Science Foundation, and a European Union Expert in Regional Policy (Regio Program). He serves at Future Earth Urban Knowledge-Action Network, Earth System Governance Project and Global Land Program, and at the New York Academy of Sciences. Gerardo has authored many scientific publications on various aspects of urbanism and global capitalist development, megaprojects, iconic architecture, technology, innovation, complex sustainability, STEM education, neoliberalism in higher education, robotics and the mathematics of music. He has received several professional recognitions and his work has been featured in the media, in both the United States and Europe. Del Cerros background is in Science, Mathematical Logic & Philosophy of Science, Social Sciences and Music. He received a full-tuition scholarship to pursue a Ph.D. at the New School for Social Research in Manhattan and graduated with Honors.