Your browser doesn't support javascript.
Show: 20 | 50 | 100
Results 1 - 2 de 2
Filter
Add filters

Database
Language
Document Type
Year range
1.
Acta Horticulturae ; 1356:93-97, 2022.
Article in English | Scopus | ID: covidwho-2217774

ABSTRACT

Urban agriculture initiatives are increasing in numbers. Projects are being created on all continents and in all kinds of cities large or small. The Covid-19 crisis has also increased the awareness of public authorities to the participation of this agriculture to food provisioning for some populations but also for its participation to social resilience of the city. Studies have been done to evaluate the impact of urban agriculture on city sustainability and tools have been developed to measure it at several scales from the city to the project. The private sector has also begun to work on tools to evaluate the sustainability of urban agricultural projects to help public authorities and landowners choose project to install in new places. With such a plethora of tools, do we still need to work on this subject? As the existing tools do not apply at the same scale, do not rely on the same goals of sustainability and are not always very transparent about their workings? The first step to answer all these questions is through a systematic review of published tools in scientific reviews. Therefore, the objective of this review is to compare the identified tools according to several criteria (scale, type of urban agriculture evaluated, sustainability dimensions studied, complexity/ number/type of indicators, public availability, etc.). This will enable us to identify both the conditions under which existing tools can be used, gaps in the existing pool of resources but also the gaps in knowledge to measure some part of UA sustainability and identified technical and organisation levers than can improve UA sustainability. The first pool of analysed articles shows the use of existing frameworks in half of them whereas half developed their own systems and sometimes indicators. Nearly all tools are based on the three sustainability pillars (environmental, economic and social) even though they are sometimes redesigned for the tool in different categories. © 2022 International Society for Horticultural Science. All rights reserved.

2.
5th International Symposium on New Metropolitan Perspectives, NMP 2022 ; 482 LNNS:690-701, 2022.
Article in English | Scopus | ID: covidwho-2048018

ABSTRACT

The environmental-climate changes and the Covid-19 emergency have highlighted the weakness of urban systems by raising the attention on adequate tools able to support the improvement of multi-events resilience. The social, natural and economic features that characterize the urban environment, make it a complex system that need to be comprehensively assessed for taking into account all the relevant factors that contributes on their resilience. Aim of the work is to define a multicriteria-based methodology able to create a geo-referenced Urban Resilience Index (IUR) that represents the capacity of the territory to face socio-economic diseases and natural disaster. The proposed protocol consists of a step by step guide for creating the IUR with the adoption of the Analytic Hierarchy Process technique for structuring and aggregating the system of indicators that represent the relevant economic, environmental and social contributions to the resilience of a certain territorial scale, and the geographic information system for the visualization of the different spatial distribution of the resilience. The proposed methodology can be used as a decision support tool for public-private partnership’s urban intervention aimed at achieving the Sustainable Development Goals of the Agenda 2030 and the European Green Deal targets. Its flexibility makes it implementable for several sustainable urban planning decision at different scale and it can be adopted for an ex ante evaluation of the urban parameters from which derive the balance sheets and the pressures on the environment. © 2022, The Author(s), under exclusive license to Springer Nature Switzerland AG.

SELECTION OF CITATIONS
SEARCH DETAIL