城市里的城市太多了?跨学科、跨学科的城市研究方法与整合的挑战

M. Keestra, N. Verloo
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引用次数: 0

摘要

导读:封城城市的跨学科、跨学科和行动研究。在我们撰写本章时,由于COVID-19冠状病毒的传播,世界上大多数城市都采取了类似的措施,目前这种病毒已成为全球大流行。不管城市的大小、位置或历史如何,观察者都会注意到,现在几乎所有的城市都陷入了停滞,市民被限制在自己的私人住宅里,社交和公共集会几乎被完全禁止,商业区几乎没有游客。尽管这些明显的相似之处令人震惊,但更仔细的研究将揭示城市之间和城市内部的重要差异——当学者们评估城市对这场大流行的反应或试图预测这些反应的后果时,这些差异可能与考虑高度相关。例如,一些城市的公共卫生系统在应对日益增多的危及生命的病人方面比其他城市做好了更好的准备。几代同堂的家庭,对老年人来说风险更大,但并非在所有城市都同样普遍。与那些在经济上不太依赖这一特定收入来源的城市相比,旅游目的地受到的经济打击更为严重。在这种情况下,一个城市的公共庆祝活动将导致更多的传染,甚至可能导致死亡,而同样的社会结构通常确实有助于人口的健康。这一流行病还对城市内部的差异和不平等产生了前所未有的影响。在美国的城市中,主要由非洲裔美国人居住的社区由于生活和健康条件而受到COVID-19的不成比例的影响,但也因为他们不成比例地从事重要工作。公园和绿地拥挤不堪,而像阿姆斯特丹红灯区这样的城市中心突然失去了旅游业的喧嚣,为市民重新占据稀缺的公共空间和收回所有权提供了机会。显然,在许多情况下,只有拥有必要背景知识的专家才能看出城市之间的这种差异,以解释全球大流行病造成的可察觉的地方变化。通常情况下,利用其学科培训,专家还知道如何以适当方式进一步探讨大流行的影响。然而,与专业知识的通常应用相比,这种危机情况可能以一种不同寻常的方式考验专家。因为大流行造成了一种独特的情况,对城市的卫生、经济、社会和其他条件施加了不熟悉的限制,这些限制有时以意想不到的方式相互作用。这种互动反过来又迫使专家们跨越通常与学科、他们的概念、理论、方法和假设相关的边界进行合作(Klein, 1996)。
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15 Too many cities in the city? Interdisciplinary and transdisciplinary city research methods and the challenge of integration
Introduction: Interdisciplinary, transdisciplinary and action research of a city in lockdown. As we write this chapter, most cities across the world are subject to a similar set of measures due to the spread of COVID-19 coronavirus, which is now a global pandemic. Independent of city size, location, or history, an observer would note that almost all cities have now ground to a halt, with their citizens being confined to their private dwellings, social and public gatherings being almost entirely forbidden, and commercial areas being nearly devoid of visitors. Striking as these apparent similarities are, closer scrutiny would reveal important differences between cities and within cities – differences that can be highly relevant to consider when scholars are assessing the responses of cities to this pandemic or trying to predict the consequences of those responses. For example, the public health systems in some cities are better prepared than in others for coping with the increasing number of patients in life threatening conditions. Multigenerational households, which are associated with a greater risk for elderly members, are not equally common in all cities. Tourist destinations have taken a more severe economic hit from the lockdown than those cities which are economically less dependent upon this particular source of income. Communal celebrations in one city will result in a higher number of contagions and perhaps even deaths in this situation, whereas that same social fabric generally does contribute to a population’s health. The pandemic has also had unprecedented effects on differences and inequalities within cities. In cities in the United States, neighborhoods primarily inhabited by African Americans have been disproportionately affected by COVID-19 due to living and health conditions, yet also due to the fact they disproportionately perform vital jobs. Parks and green spaces are crowded, while city centers like Amsterdam’s Red Light District have suddenly lost the bustle of tourism, providing opportunities for citizens to reoccupy scarce public spaces and reclaim ownership. Clearly, such differences between cities are in many cases only discernible to the eye of an expert, possessing the necessary background knowledge to interpret the perceptible local changes caused by the global pandemic. Typically, drawing upon his or her disciplinary training, the expert also knows how to further probe the impact of the pandemic in an appropriate way. However, compared to the usual application of expertise, this crisis situation might, in an unusual way, test even experts. For the pandemic has created a unique situation, imposing unfamiliar constraints on the health, economic, social, and other conditions of cities, constraints that interact in sometimes unexpected ways with each other. Such interactions in turn force experts to collaborate across the boundaries commonly associated with disciplines, their concepts, theories, methods, and assumptions (Klein, 1996).
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Glossary 12 Methods for studying urban biodiversity Acknowledgments 13 Action research in the city: developing collaborative governance arrangements for the urban commons 10 Urban research in another dimension: methods for modelling historical cities
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