Social Capital, Infrastructural Capital and Resilience Capacity in Urban Systems
A special issue of Sustainability (ISSN 2071-1050). This special issue belongs to the section "Sustainable Urban and Rural Development".
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (31 December 2022) | Viewed by 19992
Special Issue Editors
Interests: cover plan evaluation; multicriteria analysis; regional and urban planning; transport system analysis; mathematical modeling of spatial systems; migration; technological innovation; environmental and resource management
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals
Interests: creative industries; urban development; cultural heritage; digital technology; strategic performance management
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals
Interests: urban/regional demographic and economic analysis; sustainable economic development; spatial analysis of labor markets; inter-regional migration, regional economic impact analysis; tourism economics, spatial analysis, and econometrics; geographic information sciences/systems
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
This Special Issue aims to publish a collection of analytical and original contributions on the sustainability of urban systems from the perspective of community sense (social capital), connectivity/accessibility (infrastructure and social overhead capital), and the potential for recovery after a disruption (resilience capacity). Consequently, the focus will be on the fluctuations in and the evolution of cities or urban agglomerations. Social capital refers here to the cohesion or bonds among residents or groups of residents (including neighborhoods in cities), which together make up a social network that is able to better absorb shocks or uncertainties, while accessibility pertains to the physical connectivity and efficient mobility in urban areas through which infrastructure users can reach destinations with the lowest distance, friction, or shock costs possible. While applied studies are welcome, much emphasis will be placed on evidence-based, analytical studies, particularly with a view to the time-varying trajectory or socioeconomic development of urban areas that are characterized by shocks or fluctuations (both natural and man-made). The geographical coverage of these studies pertains to diverse cities (or classes of cities) from both the developing and developed world.
This Special Issue seeks, in particular, to collect papers that address the following issues or research approaches:
- analysis of the infrastructural and social conditions causing cities to be vulnerable to shocks or disasters;
- comparison of different cities that have been successful in enhancing resilience with their social capital, institutions, and community sense when facing unexpected and uncontrollable extreme events;
- emphasis on the potential for recovery of cities as a result of two types of forces, viz. social capital and accessibility; and
- attention to the governance of a complex urban system, in particular from the interwoven nature of the software (social capital) and the hardware (mobility infrastructure).
Dr. Peter Nijkamp
Dr. Karima Kourtit
Dr. Jaewon Lim
Guest Editors
Manuscript Submission Information
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Keywords
- sustainable cities
- community sense
- inclusive cities
- urban mobility
- connectivity
- accessibility
- resilience
- recovery potential
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