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Sustainable Urban Development in the European Arctic

Book cover of "Sustainable Urban Development in the European Arctic" from the "Routledge Studies in Sustainable Development" series. Authors include Dorothea Wehrmann, Michał Łuszczuk, Katarzyna Radzik-Maruszak, Jacqueline Götze, and Arne Riedel. The cover features technical drawings in white on a dark green background, along with the Open Access symbol and the Routledge logo.

© Routledge, 2025

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Sustainable Urban Development in the European Arctic

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Wehrmann, D., Luszczuk, M., Radzik-Maruszak, K., Götze, J. & Riedel, A. (2025). Sustainable Urban Development in the European Arctic. Routledge.

Focusing on cities in the European Arctic, this book consolidates research on sustainable development, local and urban governance, and transnational cooperation in the region. It examines to what extent there is transnational cooperation between urban areas in remote locations and how it can be enhanced to better align with global sustainable development policies to successfully implement goals such as the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development and the Paris Climate Agreement. 

Based on field research in seven cities in the European Arctic, Rovaniemi, Kolari, Nuuk, Akureyri, Tromsø, Kiruna, and Luleå, the authors explain why approaches to sustainable urban development differ between geographies, how policies relate to other local and global strategies, and to what degree the European Arctic is normative for remote regions at large. 

This book contributes to important conceptual debates on local governance and transnational cooperation by examining the benefits and potential issues of applying theoretical models of multi-actor engagement and participation in isolated populations. It argues that the participation of local actors in decision processes may encourage a better harmonisation of sustainable urban development approaches in the European Arctic and will have a greater impact at the global level if aligned transnationally. This book will be relevant to researchers, social scientists, policymakers, practitioners, and NGOs in the fields of global governance, sustainable development, sustainability research, and environmental studies.

The Open Access version of this book has been made available under a Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-No Derivatives (CC-BY-NC-ND) 4.0 license and is online available for free.

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Language
English
Authorship
Dorothea Wehrmann (German Institute of Development and Sustainability)
Michał Łuszczuk (Maria Curie-Skłodowska University)
Katarzyna Radzik-Maruszak (Maria Curie-Skłodowska University)
Jacqueline Götze (German Institute of Development and Sustainability)
Funding
Published by
Year
Dimension
258 pp.
ISBN
9781032254593 (hbk)
9781032257549 (pbk)
9781003284864 (ebk)
DOI
Project
Project ID
Table of contents
Keywords
European Arctic cities, Arctic urbanization, remote urban governance, sustainable city planning, transnational urban networks, Arctic policy, regional sustainability strategies, urban resilience in Arctic, climate adaptation in Arctic cities, cross-border cooperation, participatory urban governance, sustainable infrastructure in remote areas, Arctic environmental policy, socio-economic development in Arctic, indigenous governance in Arctic cities, smart cities in cold climates, policy harmonization in Arctic, multi-level governance in Arctic, climate resilience in northern cities, remote community engagement, sustainable regional development, urban policy integration, governance challenges in Arctic, comparative Arctic studies, Nordic urban planning, Arctic urban policy frameworks
European Arctic, Rovaniemi, Kolari, Nuuk, Akureyri, Tromsø, Kiruna, Luleå
desk study, interviews