Not troughthe mountain! Socio-environmental risks of a highway project in the córdoba hills.
To what extent does urban development generate climate change impacts? The article responds by analyzing habitat and sustainability as concepts framed in environmental problems. Theoretical and empirical justifications surrounding the case of the Punilla highway and its socio-environmental consequen...
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| Formato: | Artículo revista |
| Lenguaje: | Español |
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Instituto de Investigación de Vivienda y Hábitat
2021
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| Acceso en línea: | https://revistas.unc.edu.ar/index.php/ReViyCi/article/view/34823 |
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| Sumario: | To what extent does urban development generate climate change impacts? The article responds by analyzing habitat and sustainability as concepts framed in environmental problems. Theoretical and empirical justifications surrounding the case of the Punilla highway and its socio-environmental consequences are presented. The objective is to bring working keys that emerge from the case study to contribute to institutional policies and strategies that include balanced territorial development at all its scales. It is proposed as a hypothesis that the sustainable habitat is a scenario of transdisciplinary dialogue that allows integrating these dimensions. This approach implies reviewing the theoretical and empirical justifications that surround the case and the socio-environmental consequences that this project follows. The methodological approach associates heterogeneous facts in a diffuse space-time, for this multisituted ethnography is the tool that recovers the associations generated in context. This vision allows us to be outside the inherited perspective (which includes a single way of understanding the territory). If sustainable habitat is the space in which living beings interact, it becomes evident to accept how imminent it is to delay climate change and to ensure a balance in which “progress does not cost life”. |
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