COVID-19

COVID-19 continues to teach us lessons about our urban design, which has been so divorced from natural systems. Specifically, world over, it has challenged the decades old principle of urban planning which says that cities should be as dense as can be. With ingrained lifestyles in the dense concrete...

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Main Author: Nitin Pandit
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Nandan Nawn 2020-07-01
Series:Ecology, Economy and Society – The INSEE Journal
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ecoinsee.org/journal/ojs/index.php/ees/article/view/252
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author_sort Nitin Pandit
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description COVID-19 continues to teach us lessons about our urban design, which has been so divorced from natural systems. Specifically, world over, it has challenged the decades old principle of urban planning which says that cities should be as dense as can be. With ingrained lifestyles in the dense concrete jungles, it becomes difficult for those who benefit from urban density to admit that there is a limit to density when we ourselves have become the vectors and victims of the virus.  Meanwhile in densely urban India, the poor migrants bear the risk of being exported from the urban dreams that they never got to share. That may or may not change the traditional orientation toward growth-at-all-costs, but there may be an increased appreciation and demand among the urbanites for working with nature.
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spelling doaj.art-2c2587be44f74b16a8417cddbbb878cb2022-12-21T23:24:43ZengNandan NawnEcology, Economy and Society – The INSEE Journal2581-61522581-61012020-07-013210.37773/ees.v3i2.252COVID-19Nitin Pandit0Ashoka Trust for Research in Ecology and the Environment (ATREE)COVID-19 continues to teach us lessons about our urban design, which has been so divorced from natural systems. Specifically, world over, it has challenged the decades old principle of urban planning which says that cities should be as dense as can be. With ingrained lifestyles in the dense concrete jungles, it becomes difficult for those who benefit from urban density to admit that there is a limit to density when we ourselves have become the vectors and victims of the virus.  Meanwhile in densely urban India, the poor migrants bear the risk of being exported from the urban dreams that they never got to share. That may or may not change the traditional orientation toward growth-at-all-costs, but there may be an increased appreciation and demand among the urbanites for working with nature.https://ecoinsee.org/journal/ojs/index.php/ees/article/view/252COVIDurban planningdensity
spellingShingle Nitin Pandit
COVID-19
Ecology, Economy and Society – The INSEE Journal
COVID
urban planning
density
title COVID-19
title_full COVID-19
title_fullStr COVID-19
title_full_unstemmed COVID-19
title_short COVID-19
title_sort covid 19
topic COVID
urban planning
density
url https://ecoinsee.org/journal/ojs/index.php/ees/article/view/252
work_keys_str_mv AT nitinpandit covid19