The condition of urban climate experimentation

Publication date

2023-03

Authors

Bulkeley, HarrietORCID 0000-0001-9912-5687ISNI 0000000122765491

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
Open Access logo

License

cc_by

Abstract

As the trend of urban climate experimentation continues, many accounts now seek to identify how it can be harnessed toward responses of sufficient scale and magnitude for the crises at hand. The imperative is to move beyond experimentation. Yet some authors now suggest that this may not be so straightforward for, they argue, we increasingly inhabit a condition of permanent experimentation. Taking its cue from this premise, this article explores where the condition of experimentation may have emerged from. I trace these roots to the limit points now encountered within ecologically modernist governance?the shifting dynamics of governing authority, the relation between knowledge and policy, how to address indeterminacy, and what progress or improvement looks like in the condition of a climate-changed socio-natural world. Viewed in this light, experimentation, I want to suggest, represents a significant and potentially paradigm-shifting break with established norms and practices concerning the nature of the climate problem. Fundamentally, this line of thought means that it may neither be possible nor even desirable to abandon experimentation and to return to more centralized, controlled, and certain responses for it is from within the difficulties of governing a climate-changing world through this paradigm that experimentation has arisen in the first place. The vital task is instead to understand the politics and possibilities of experimentation for progressive and just urban sustainability.

Keywords

climate change, governance, experimentation, urban, transitions, SDG 11 - Sustainable Cities and Communities, SDG 13 - Climate Action

Citation

Bulkeley, H 2023, 'The condition of urban climate experimentation', Sustainability: Science, Practice, and Policy, vol. 19, no. 1, 2188726. https://doi.org/10.1080/15487733.2023.2188726