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Publication


Featured researches published by Giles Thomson.


AMBIO: A Journal of the Human Environment | 2018

Sustainable urban systems: Co-design and framing for transformation

Robert Webb; Xuemei Bai; Mark Stafford Smith; Robert Costanza; David Griggs; Magnus Moglia; Michael Neuman; Peter Newman; Peter W. Newton; Barbara Norman; Chris Ryan; Heinz Schandl; Will Steffen; Nigel J. Tapper; Giles Thomson

Rapid urbanisation generates risks and opportunities for sustainable development. Urban policy and decision makers are challenged by the complexity of cities as social–ecological–technical systems. Consequently there is an increasing need for collaborative knowledge development that supports a whole-of-system view, and transformational change at multiple scales. Such holistic urban approaches are rare in practice. A co-design process involving researchers, practitioners and other stakeholders, has progressed such an approach in the Australian context, aiming to also contribute to international knowledge development and sharing. This process has generated three outputs: (1) a shared framework to support more systematic knowledge development and use, (2) identification of barriers that create a gap between stated urban goals and actual practice, and (3) identification of strategic focal areas to address this gap. Developing integrated strategies at broader urban scales is seen as the most pressing need. The knowledge framework adopts a systems perspective that incorporates the many urban trade-offs and synergies revealed by a systems view. Broader implications are drawn for policy and decision makers, for researchers and for a shared forward agenda.


Urban Studies | 2018

Cities and the Anthropocene: Urban governance for the new era of regenerative cities:

Giles Thomson; Peter Newman

The emerging ‘grand challenges’ of climate change, resource scarcity and population growth present a risk nexus to cities in the Anthropocene. This article discusses the potential that rapid urbanisation presents to help mitigate these risks through large-scale transitions if future urban development is delivered using evidence-based policies that promote regenerative urban outcomes (e.g. decarbonising energy, recycling water and waste, generating local food, integrating biodiversity). Observations from an Australian case study are used to describe urban governance approaches capable of supporting regenerative urbanism. The regenerative urbanism concept is associated with macro-scale urban and transport planning that shapes different urban fabrics (walking, transit, automobile), as the underlying infrastructure of each fabric exhibits a different performance, with automobile fabric being the least regenerative. Supporting urban systems based upon regenerative design principles at different scales (macro, meso and micro) can deliver deep and dramatic outcomes for not just reducing the impact of the grand challenges but turning them into regenerative change. In combination, these approaches form the cornerstone of regenerative cities that can address the grand challenges of the Anthropocene, while simultaneously improving livability and urban productivity to foster human flourishing.


Resources Conservation and Recycling | 2017

Urban fabrics and urban metabolism – from sustainable to regenerative cities

Giles Thomson; Peter Newman


Geosciences (Switzerland) | 2016

Geoengineering in the Anthropocene through Regenerative Urbanism

Giles Thomson; Peter Newman


City, culture and society | 2017

Planning support systems for smart cities

Christopher Pettit; Ashley Bakelmun; Scott N. Lieske; Stephen Glackin; Karlson Hargroves; Giles Thomson; Heather Shearer; Hussein Dia; Peter Newman


Resources Conservation and Recycling | 2017

Exploring urban metabolism—Towards an interdisciplinary perspective

Martin Dijst; Ernst Worrell; Lars Böcker; Paul H. Brunner; Simin Davoudi; Stan Geertman; Robert Harmsen; Marco Helbich; Albert A. M. Holtslag; Mei Po Kwan; Barbara Lenz; Glenn Lyons; Patricia L. Mokhtarian; Peter Newman; Adriaan Perrels; Ana Poças Ribeiro; Jesús Rosales Carreón; Giles Thomson; Diana Ürge-Vorsatz; Marianne Zeyringer


Journal of Urban Regeneration and Renewal | 2016

Urban Regeneration and Urban Fabrics in Australian Cities

Giles Thomson; Peter Newman; Peter W. Newton


Scenario Planning Transport Futures: Improved Road and Transport Planning using Digital Scenario Planning Tools | 2017

Big city planning and digital tools: improving urban and transport planning - A Sustainable Built Environment National Research Centre (SBEnrc) Industry Report

Peter Newman; Christopher Pettit; Giles Thomson; Hussein Dia; Stephen Glackin; Heather Shearer; Karlson Hargroves


Archive | 2017

Big city planning and digital tools: improving urban and transport planning

Peter Newman; Christopher Pettit; Giles Thomson; Hussein Dia; Stephen Glackin; Heather Shearer; Charlie Hargroves


Urban regeneration: a handbook (revised edition) / Peter Roberts, Hugh Sykes and Rachel Granger (eds.) | 2016

Urban regeneration in Australia

Peter W. Newton; Giles Thomson

Collaboration


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Christopher Pettit

University of New South Wales

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Hussein Dia

University of Queensland

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Peter W. Newton

Swinburne University of Technology

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Stephen Glackin

Swinburne University of Technology

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Ashley Bakelmun

University of New South Wales

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