The Urban Political Ecologies of Vancouver: Sustainable Development and Affordability
Sham
Fred
author
Columbia University. Architecture, Planning, and Preservation
Beauregard
Robert
thesis advisor
Columbia University. Architecture, Planning, and Preservation
Columbia University. Urban Planning
originator
text
Master's theses
2012
English
Urban political ecology combines the approaches of political economy and the study of human ecology. One subfield of this subject focuses on critically examining state policies relating to urban environmental and economic governance through a lens of distributional justice. This thesis investigates how political, economic, and social processes have collectively (re)created inequitable urban natures in Vancouver, Canada, under the banner of sustainability. In 2008, Vancouver’s City Council unanimously voted to pass the EcoDensity Initiative, a comprehensive policy and vision document that strategically used increased densities and high performance green design to not only reduce the city’s ecological footprint, but also simultaneously enhance housing affordability and livability. Using case studies, interviews and comparing assessed property value changes, this thesis demonstrates that Vancouver’s urban environmental governance policies have contributed to dramatically increasing property values, effectively exacerbating the city’s housing affordability crisis for low-to-middle income earners. At its core, EcoDensity strategically mandates high performance green design not only to meet ecological goals, but also to buttress markets of green enterprise and enforce its consumption as a means of economic development. While the pursuit of ecological sustainability and economic development are worthy priorities, without a realignment of institutional capacities to address social equity, the city’s ecological and economic gains may be eroded.
M.S., Columbia University.
Urban planning
Ecology
http://hdl.handle.net/10022/AC:P:13345
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2012-06-04 13:20:29 -0400
2012-06-04 13:36:26 -0400
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eng