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E-grāmata: Sustainable Intercultural Urbanism at the Service of the African City of Tomorrow

Edited by (University of Padua, Italy)
  • Formāts: EPUB+DRM
  • Izdošanas datums: 03-Jun-2022
  • Izdevniecība: ISTE Ltd and John Wiley & Sons Inc
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781119988403
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  • Formāts: EPUB+DRM
  • Izdošanas datums: 03-Jun-2022
  • Izdevniecība: ISTE Ltd and John Wiley & Sons Inc
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781119988403
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Most African cities are human settlements that lack the systems needed for effective land use planning. In fact, the disorganization that prevails has become so complex that the concept of urbanism itself has been called into question. This book highlights the need to restore urban planning in African cities through sustainable development and interculturality. Furthermore, it addresses the balance of power between urban planning and sustainable development and explores the historical and postcolonial aspects of urban planning in African cities.

A case study focusing on the development of sustainable cities and neighborhoods in the M’Zab Valley is also included, as well as topics such as urban greening, climatic threats and the problem of state agroindustrial land transactions, which compete with sustainable urban planning. Sustainable Intercultural Urbanism at the Service of the African City of Tomorrow is a valuable reference for researchers and practitioners interested in urban issues in African cities. These cities, in particular sub Saharan cities, have long been excluded from any discourse on sustainable cities and urban planning; this book places the focus on these cities and acknowledges their varied urban realities. The intention is to spark a new debate on sustainable urban planning in African cities based on intercultural sustainable urbanism, which is key to thinking about and building ecological, intercultural, compact, intelligent and postcolonial cities.
Introduction ix
Esoh Elame
Chapter 1 Intercuttural and Sustainable Urban Planning
1(40)
Esoh Elame
1.1 Introduction
1(3)
1.2 Did you say modern urban planning?
4(4)
1.3 Sustainable urban planning: beyond the effects of fashion
8(6)
1.4 The sustainable city: a process and a product of sustainable urban planning
14(2)
1.5 Sustainable urban planning and the challenges of diversity in an urban context
16(3)
1.6 The convergences between intercultural urban planning and sustainable urban planning in concrete terms
19(2)
1.7 The place of urban planning in the intercultural city
21(13)
1.7.1 Religious diversity in the city
22(1)
1.7.2 Cultural diversity in the city
23(2)
1.7.3 Sexual orientation diversity in me city
25(1)
1.7.4 Gender diversity
26(3)
1.7.5 Diversity related to persons with reduced mobility (PRM)
29(5)
1.8 Intercultural sustainable urban planning and the 2030 Agenda
34(1)
1.9 The New Urban Agenda and the demands of intercultural sustainable urban planning
35(1)
1.10 Conclusion
36(1)
1.11 References
37(4)
Chapter 2 Understanding the Challenges of Postcolonial Urban Planning in Sub-Saharan Cities
41(34)
Esoh Elame
2.1 Setting the context
41(1)
2.2 Theoretical framework: on the road to postcolonial urban planning
42(5)
2.3 Methodological framework
47(1)
2.4 Results: lessons to be learned from the urban planning crisis in sub-Saharan African cities
47(14)
2.4.1 Pre-colonial urban production: a heritage to be developed
48(4)
2.4.2 Classical colonial urban planning
52(4)
2.4.3 De-colonial urban planning
56(2)
2.4.4 There is only one step from post-colonial to neo-colonial urban planning
58(3)
2.5 Discussion: toward postcolonial urban planning in sub-Saharan cities
61(9)
2.5.1 Decontextualized urban development models
61(1)
2.5.2 Escaping the confusion between urban planning and urbanization
62(1)
2.5.3 Enhancing pre-colonial urban planning
62(1)
2.5.4 The future of the colonial urban legacy
63(1)
2.5.5 The future of endogenous knowledge in urban planning and architecture
64(3)
2.5.6 Making the case for postcolonial urban planning in sub-Saharan cities
67(3)
2.6 Conclusion
70(1)
2.7 References
71(4)
Chapter 3 A New Sustainable City in Southern Algeria: Ayrem Ajdid of Tafilelt in Ighzar N'Mzab
75(36)
Nora Gueliane
3.1 Geographic setting and field survey
75(5)
3.2 Presentation of the project
80(25)
3.2.1 The genesis of the project: Tafilelt, a step toward sustainability
82(23)
3.3 Conclusion
105(2)
3.4 References
107(4)
Chapter 4 The Problem of Endogenous Urban Greening of Cities in the Congo Basin
111(18)
Esoh Elame
4.1 Introduction
111(1)
4.2 Conceptual clarification
112(2)
4.3 Tools and methods
114(1)
4.4 Results
115(8)
4.4.1 Cities in the Congo Basin are primarily forest cities
115(1)
4.4.2 Vegetation in the cities of the Congo Basin is no longer a given
116(1)
4.4.3 Failure to take into account ancestral knowledge of urban greening such as sacred natural sites in urban governance
117(6)
4.5 Discussion
123(2)
4.6 Conclusion
125(1)
4.7 References
126(3)
Chapter 5 The Contribution of Space Technologies in Understanding Environmental Devastation Due to Climate Change in African Cities: The Case of Kribi, Cameroon
129(30)
Philippes Mbevo Fendoung
5.1 Introduction
129(2)
5.2 Tools and working method
131(5)
5.2.1 Presentation and location of the study area
131(2)
5.2.2 Image acquisition and processing
133(1)
5.2.3 Calculating surface temperatures from the Landsat 7 thermal band
134(2)
5.3 Results, analysis and discussion
136(18)
5.3.1 Evolution of climatic parameters in the chy of Kribi
136(5)
5.3.2 The different major climatic risks recorded in the city of Kribi
141(3)
5.3.3 Modeling the dynamics of land use in and around the city of Kribi
144(4)
5.3.4 Adaptation and sustainable management of environmental disruption measures in the city of Kribi
148(4)
5.3.5 A geomatics solution: setting up a geographic database (GIS) for sustainable flood management in the city of Kribi
152(2)
5.3.6 The creation of a new town in Kribi
154(1)
5.4 Conclusion
154(1)
5.5 References
155(4)
Chapter 6 Sustainable Planning in the Context of Agro-Industrial Land Allocations in Cameroon: The Case of the Town of Nanga-Eboko
159(20)
Joseph-Eric Nnomenko'o
6.1 Introduction
159(1)
6.2 Theoretical framework: the stakeholder game approach
160(1)
6.3 Methodology
161(2)
6.4 Location and socio-economic characteristics of the town of Nanga - Eboko
163(1)
6.5 Results/analysis: the social context of agro-industrial land allocations in Nanga-Eboko
164(2)
6.5.1 The ecosystem of agro-industrial land allocations: actors, issues and actor strategies
164(1)
6.5.2 Types of land conflicts generated by agro-industrial land allocations in Nanga-Eboko
165(1)
6.6 Precariousness of the socio-economic fabric of Nanga-Eboko notwithstanding the agro-industrial land allocations that prevail there: inventory of some basic infrastructures
166(3)
6.6.1 Water infrastructure
167(1)
6.6.2 Electrical infrastructure
168(1)
6.6.3 The road network
168(1)
6.6.4 The sanitary network
168(1)
6.6.5 Basic education
168(1)
6.7 Recommendations: inclusive and concerted agro-industrial land allocations as a guarantee for the sustainable town in Nanga-Eboko, and at the macro scale of Cameroon
169(6)
6.7.1 Breaking with the omerta
169(2)
6.7.2 The imperative of inclusive land governance
171(3)
6.7.3 Developing a genuine land policy
174(1)
6.8 Conclusion
175(1)
6.9 References
176(3)
Conclusion 179(4)
Esoh Elame
List of Authors 183(2)
Index 185
Esoh Elame is a geographer, town planner, geologist and pedagogist. He is a professor at the University of Padua, Italy, as well as a permanent associate professor at the National Advanced School of Public Works and at Institut des Relations Internationales du Cameroun (IRIC) of the University of Yaoundé II, Cameroon. His research focuses on African cities and intercultural sustainable development.