TY - JOUR
T1 - (Mis-)belonging to the climate-resilient city
T2 - Making place in multi-risk communities of racialized urban America
AU - Shokry, Galia
AU - Anguelovski, Isabelle
AU - Connolly, James J. T.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 Urban Affairs Association.
PY - 2023/2/21
Y1 - 2023/2/21
N2 - Through climate adaptation planning cities are transforming places and relations, most recently via green climate resilient infrastructure (GRI). Yet, GRI’s incorporation into existing, racialized infrastructure systems of urban development, regeneration and finance has raised questions about the socio-cultural impacts and justice dimensions of recent directions in climate adaptation planning and urbanism. While critical scholars highlight the exclusion of historically marginalized residents, this paper’s analysis of the impacts of GRI-driven planning for sense of belonging reveals a complex and multi-faceted experience of gentrification and displacement in the racialized, settler colonial city. Drawing on insights from civic actors about their lived experience of green and climate resilient projects in Boston, Massachusetts, we develop a novel understanding of belonging, which entails degrees of (mis)belonging. Our analysis uncovers three pathways by which climate urbanism shapes belonging into various alienated, subordinated, assimilated and emancipated forms, and reveals the kinds of political subjects and socio-cultural relations that emerge from the lived experience of climate adaptation projects. More broadly, this study sheds light on how less visible placemaking practices and alternative modes of addressing socio-climate vulnerability contribute to climate justice and injustice dynamics.
AB - Through climate adaptation planning cities are transforming places and relations, most recently via green climate resilient infrastructure (GRI). Yet, GRI’s incorporation into existing, racialized infrastructure systems of urban development, regeneration and finance has raised questions about the socio-cultural impacts and justice dimensions of recent directions in climate adaptation planning and urbanism. While critical scholars highlight the exclusion of historically marginalized residents, this paper’s analysis of the impacts of GRI-driven planning for sense of belonging reveals a complex and multi-faceted experience of gentrification and displacement in the racialized, settler colonial city. Drawing on insights from civic actors about their lived experience of green and climate resilient projects in Boston, Massachusetts, we develop a novel understanding of belonging, which entails degrees of (mis)belonging. Our analysis uncovers three pathways by which climate urbanism shapes belonging into various alienated, subordinated, assimilated and emancipated forms, and reveals the kinds of political subjects and socio-cultural relations that emerge from the lived experience of climate adaptation projects. More broadly, this study sheds light on how less visible placemaking practices and alternative modes of addressing socio-climate vulnerability contribute to climate justice and injustice dynamics.
KW - Climate resilience planning
KW - belonging
KW - climate coloniality
KW - climate justice
KW - gentrification
KW - green infrastructure
KW - placemaking
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85148645097&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - https://www.mendeley.com/catalogue/6c9b4a54-071e-3c65-b0f8-49bf496d3a3b/
U2 - 10.1080/07352166.2022.2160339
DO - 10.1080/07352166.2022.2160339
M3 - Article
SN - 0735-2166
JO - Journal of Urban Affairs
JF - Journal of Urban Affairs
ER -