Urban Climate Governance: Implementation in Belgrade, Serbia
2023
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Конференцијски прилог (Објављена верзија)
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Urban areas are vulnerable to the impacts of climate change, while simultaneously, also having a significant impact on it. Urban Climate Governance encompasses the ways in which public, private, and civil society actors collaborate to set climate objectives, exercise power, and regulate planning and implementation efforts. There are examples of cities launching projects on their own initiative to address a specific problem caused by climate change. Under the pressure of global climate change, urban areas have become an important testing ground for climate action. Governance is considered a key component of effective and integrated action on climate change. The undertaken work presents an overview of the development trajectory in relation to diverse governance instruments, dominant themes, and approaches in solving the problem of climate change. Research shows that through new theoretical foundations, new instruments appear, and that governance instruments are necessary in order to deri...ve changes in urban systems. The work emphasizes that multilevel governance plays a crucial role in this process, by encouraging actor networks, and especially when adopting financial governance instruments primarily intended for developing countries. This enables the development of untraditional methods for urban governance related to climate change in Serbia. The paper explores the implementation processes of identified governance instruments in the conditions of the local context of Belgrade, a post-socialist city. It aims to understand the role of the actors involved and how the different instruments influence future planning activities concerning climate change. To accomplish that, this study adopts a qualitative approach that investigates externally funded projects related to climate change adaptation currently implemented in Belgrade. The paper relies on desk research on relevant literature, key strategy documents, and pilot projects. These results offer insight into the development of governance instruments for making modest, practical steps towards increasing the climate urban resilience of Belgrade.
Кључне речи:
urban planning / urban governance / Climate Change / Belgrade / SerbiaИзвор:
EURA 2023 : book of abstracts, University of Iceland Reykjavík, 22-24 June, 2023, 74-75Издавач:
- Rejkjavik : University of Iceland
Институција/група
Arhitektonski fakultetTY - CONF AU - Šabanović, Ana AU - Čolić, Ratka PY - 2023 UR - https://raf.arh.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/2287 AB - Urban areas are vulnerable to the impacts of climate change, while simultaneously, also having a significant impact on it. Urban Climate Governance encompasses the ways in which public, private, and civil society actors collaborate to set climate objectives, exercise power, and regulate planning and implementation efforts. There are examples of cities launching projects on their own initiative to address a specific problem caused by climate change. Under the pressure of global climate change, urban areas have become an important testing ground for climate action. Governance is considered a key component of effective and integrated action on climate change. The undertaken work presents an overview of the development trajectory in relation to diverse governance instruments, dominant themes, and approaches in solving the problem of climate change. Research shows that through new theoretical foundations, new instruments appear, and that governance instruments are necessary in order to derive changes in urban systems. The work emphasizes that multilevel governance plays a crucial role in this process, by encouraging actor networks, and especially when adopting financial governance instruments primarily intended for developing countries. This enables the development of untraditional methods for urban governance related to climate change in Serbia. The paper explores the implementation processes of identified governance instruments in the conditions of the local context of Belgrade, a post-socialist city. It aims to understand the role of the actors involved and how the different instruments influence future planning activities concerning climate change. To accomplish that, this study adopts a qualitative approach that investigates externally funded projects related to climate change adaptation currently implemented in Belgrade. The paper relies on desk research on relevant literature, key strategy documents, and pilot projects. These results offer insight into the development of governance instruments for making modest, practical steps towards increasing the climate urban resilience of Belgrade. PB - Rejkjavik : University of Iceland C3 - EURA 2023 : book of abstracts, University of Iceland Reykjavík, 22-24 June T1 - Urban Climate Governance: Implementation in Belgrade, Serbia SP - 74 EP - 75 UR - https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_raf_2287 ER -
@conference{ author = "Šabanović, Ana and Čolić, Ratka", year = "2023", abstract = "Urban areas are vulnerable to the impacts of climate change, while simultaneously, also having a significant impact on it. Urban Climate Governance encompasses the ways in which public, private, and civil society actors collaborate to set climate objectives, exercise power, and regulate planning and implementation efforts. There are examples of cities launching projects on their own initiative to address a specific problem caused by climate change. Under the pressure of global climate change, urban areas have become an important testing ground for climate action. Governance is considered a key component of effective and integrated action on climate change. The undertaken work presents an overview of the development trajectory in relation to diverse governance instruments, dominant themes, and approaches in solving the problem of climate change. Research shows that through new theoretical foundations, new instruments appear, and that governance instruments are necessary in order to derive changes in urban systems. The work emphasizes that multilevel governance plays a crucial role in this process, by encouraging actor networks, and especially when adopting financial governance instruments primarily intended for developing countries. This enables the development of untraditional methods for urban governance related to climate change in Serbia. The paper explores the implementation processes of identified governance instruments in the conditions of the local context of Belgrade, a post-socialist city. It aims to understand the role of the actors involved and how the different instruments influence future planning activities concerning climate change. To accomplish that, this study adopts a qualitative approach that investigates externally funded projects related to climate change adaptation currently implemented in Belgrade. The paper relies on desk research on relevant literature, key strategy documents, and pilot projects. These results offer insight into the development of governance instruments for making modest, practical steps towards increasing the climate urban resilience of Belgrade.", publisher = "Rejkjavik : University of Iceland", journal = "EURA 2023 : book of abstracts, University of Iceland Reykjavík, 22-24 June", title = "Urban Climate Governance: Implementation in Belgrade, Serbia", pages = "74-75", url = "https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_raf_2287" }
Šabanović, A.,& Čolić, R.. (2023). Urban Climate Governance: Implementation in Belgrade, Serbia. in EURA 2023 : book of abstracts, University of Iceland Reykjavík, 22-24 June Rejkjavik : University of Iceland., 74-75. https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_raf_2287
Šabanović A, Čolić R. Urban Climate Governance: Implementation in Belgrade, Serbia. in EURA 2023 : book of abstracts, University of Iceland Reykjavík, 22-24 June. 2023;:74-75. https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_raf_2287 .
Šabanović, Ana, Čolić, Ratka, "Urban Climate Governance: Implementation in Belgrade, Serbia" in EURA 2023 : book of abstracts, University of Iceland Reykjavík, 22-24 June (2023):74-75, https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_raf_2287 .