Volatility Shocks from 2020: The Big Picture and Moving Forward
Giuseppe T. Cirella, Bharat Dahiya
The Impact of Policies on Cities' Resilience in Canada: A Multi-scalar Approach
Jesse Sutton, Godwin Arku
Why is Landscape Architecture Crucial for COVID-19 Recovery and Future Urban Shocks and Stresses?
Alessio Russo
The Transformation of Public Spaces in Face of Emergency Urbanism
Maria de Lourdes Carneiro da Cunha Nóbrega, Isabella Leite Trindade, Ana
Luisa Rolim
Impact of the Pandemic on the Informalized Workforce: The Case of Women Domestic Workers in Bengaluru
Vinita Yadav, Sherin Jacob
Critique of the Indonesian Omnibus Law Regime: Misguided Interpretation in Narrating ‘Village Owned Enterprises’
Aurora Meliala, Anis Rifai
The Accumulation of Plastic Waste During the COVID-19 Pandemic: Environmental Footprint Case Research
Cengiz Kahraman, Mohammed Sharaf, Giuseppe T. Cirella
Urbanization and CO2 Emissions: Panel Data Analysis of EU countries
Jana Chovancová, Igor Petruška, Eva Litavcová, Giuseppe T. Cirella
E-scooter Sharing and Pandemic Effects on the Bike Sharing Market in Poland
Tomasz Bieliński, Agnieszka Ważna
Impact of the Global Pandemic on the Activities and Preparedness of Protection, Rescue, and Relief Services in Slovenia
Janja Kramer Stajnko, Matjaž P. Nekrep, Giuseppe T. Cirella
The Role of Urbanization in Africa: A New Analysis on Temperature and Precipitation
Bruno E. Ongo Nkao, Jacques S. Song, and Giuseppe T. Cirella
Giuseppe T. Cirella, Professor of Human Geography, works at the Faculty of Economics, University of Gdansk, Sopot, Poland, where he received a Doctor of Habilitation (Dr. Hab.) in Economics and Finance. He specializes in economic development, environmental social science, and sustainability. His interdisciplinary background also includes socio-political research throughout Eastern Europe, Africa, and China. After completing a Doctor of Philosophy (Ph. D.) at Griffith University, Gold Coast, Australia, within the Centre for Infrastructure Engineering and Management, on developing a sustainability-based index, he founded the Polo Center of Sustainability in Italy. Notably, he has held professorships and scientific positions at Saint Petersburg State University, Russia; Inner Mongolia University of Science and Technology, China; Life University, Cambodia; and Free University of Bozen, Italy. In his early career, he worked with the Canadian International Development Agency in Indonesia as well as with Radarsat International in Brazil.
Bharat Dahiya is Director of Research Center for Sustainable Development and Innovation at the School of Global Studies, Thammasat University, Thailand. He is Extraordinary Professor at the School of Public Leadership, Stellenbosch University, Western Cape, South Africa, and Adjunct Faculty at the Asian Institute of Technology, Thailand. An award-winning urbanist, he combines cutting-edge research, policy analysis, and development practice aimed at examining and tackling socioeconomic, environmental, and governance issues in the global urban context of sustainable development. Since the early 1990s, his research and professional work has focused on sustainable cities and urbanization, strategic urban planning and development, urban infrastructure, urban environment, climate change and urban resilience, post-disaster recovery and reconstruction, and cultural heritage and landscapes.
This book presents the integrating of economics and urban geography to create a framework of cooperation around the idea of urban economic stability. It explores these disciplines through the economic lens and creates a collaborative environment for addressing the global challenges caused by the COVID-19 pandemic and future global shocks. Environmental advocates and proponents of economic growth are increasingly at odds—having looked at the economic impact of the decline of the environment as well as the environmental loss that occurs with unchecked growth and urbanization. The outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic changed the global scene. The world shook in its foundations, as a number of countries’ lockdown affected not only the global economy but also society and the environment. The global community has seen the negative impact of COVID-19 on our economies. There have been steep declines in gross domestic product, job losses have been in the millions, and people have seen their incomes fall. An unplanned shutdown has taken its toll and has been a shock to the economies of the world. Past shocks and how they have impacted urban economies as well as for how long are core to bettering our understanding of present and future urban economic change. The underlying economic factors that make a shock more damaging to certain economies or industries, as well as understanding these vulnerabilities, help entities recover from economic shocks and allow them to better understand how impacts on individual businesses can be implemented. The pandemic revealed the need to adopt a global development approach, taking into consideration four dimensions: global value chains, debt, digitalization, and the environment. Topics related to the causation and lockdown are explored through a number of case studies from around the world.