Escaping Urbanism: Green Acres, Climate Migration, and the End of the Megacity
Update: 2024-04-031
Description
Did a whimsical 1960s TV sitcom presage climate migration and a reversal of urban growth? We're not calling for a Godzilla-esque teardown of cities, but climate change is forcing a serious urban rethink. Jason, Rob, and Asher offer visions of better infrastructure, policies, and culture that you can embrace, even if your home is in the city.
Warning: This podcast occasionally uses spicy language.
Sources/Links/Notes:
- Wikipedia page for Paul Henning, creative force behind the spate of 1960s rural sitcoms.
- The Rural Climate Dialogues: A Community-Driven Roadmap for Climate Action in Rural Minnesota is a report by Tara Ritter with good summary statistics on the rural U.S.
- “Total and urban population” in UNCTAD Handbook of Statistics 2023.
- United Nations prediction about urban migration.
- “Out-of-Towners Head to ‘Climate-Proof Duluth,’” article by Debra Kamin in the New York Times.
- “Indonesia Is Moving its Capital to a Futuristic, Green City,” article by Katherine McLaughlin in Architectural Digest.
- Anthropogenic mass – the weight of everything humanity has built, statistics from the World Economic Forum..
- Analysis of transportation-related energy consumption and urban density, published in “U.S. Cities Factsheet” from the University of Michigan Center for Sustainable Systems.
- The 15-Minute City
- Retrosuburbia: The Downshifter’s Guide to a Resilient Future, book by David Holmgren.
- Global Ecovillage Network
- Daily Acts
- StoveTeam International
- One Planet Council
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