A sociologist explores why Green Cities won\'t fix everything--and urges us to celebrate urban life as it is Everywhere you look, Cities are getting greener.
Ultimately, he makes an argument for celebrating the contemporary city as it is--in all its noisy, constructed, artificial glory. .
Talking to policy makers, planners, scientists, and architects, Fitzgerald suggests that underneath the wish to turn future Cities Green is another wish: to make the modern city, and perhaps the modern world, disappear altogether.
In The Living City , Fitzgerald tours the international Green city movement that has flourished across the world and discovers the deep, sometimes troubling, roots of our desire to connect Cities to nature.
However, argues sociologist Des Fitzgerald, Green spaces are not the panacea that people think.
The general assumption is clear: if something is unhealthy or bad about urban life today, then nature holds the cure.
A sociologist explores why Green Cities won\'t fix everything--and urges us to celebrate urban life as it is Everywhere you look, Cities are getting greener