Sustainable urban planning aims to decrease the ecological footprint of cities while maintaining or increasing social welfare, however it does not consider limits to economic growth and therefore undermines its own ambition. The upcoming field of degrowth offers a theoretical answer to this dilemma but the degrowth lens has only scarcely been applied to existing cities and the field of urban planning. This thesis addresses these gaps by exploring to what extent a growth mindset underpins planning in the city of Amsterdam and what the need and potential for degrowth could be in sustainable urban planning for the city’s future. The qualitative research design includes a document analysis of degrowth proposals for urban planning, a historical analysis of urban planning focusing on degrowth precedents and finally interviews with respondents related to sustainable urban planning and degrowth.
References can be found inside the document.
An urgent necessity for a degrowth approach in sustainable urban planning in Amsterdam is demonstrated in this research. Currently, issues of global and long-term social and environmental impact are not sufficiently addressed. Degrowth can respond to these issues with a broad pallet of proposals from the planning process itself, to the design of public space and large economic policy changes. An overview of these degrowth proposals for sustainable urban planning shows that a degrowth implementation faces big obstacles. An example project such as the re-localization of the food system of Amsterdam can be a valuable showcase for a degrowth approach in sustainable urban planning.
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