This paper reviews the long tradition of city-scale climatological and meteorological applications prior to the emergence in the 1990s of early work on the urban/global climate change interface. It shows how 'valuing and seeing the urban' came to be achieved within modern scientific meteorology and how in a limited but significant set of cases that science has contributed to urban practice. The paper traces the evolution of urban climatology since 1950 as a distinct research field within physical geography and meteorology, and its transition from observational monographs to process modelling; reviews the precedents, successful or otherwise, of knowledge transfer from science into public action through climatically aware regulation or design of urban environment; and notes the neglect of these precedents in contemporary climate change discourse-a serious omission. © 2013 Urban Studies Journal Limited.
CITATION STYLE
Hebbert, M., & Jankovic, V. (2013, May 1). Cities and Climate Change: The Precedents and Why They Matter. Urban Studies. SAGE Publications Ltd. https://doi.org/10.1177/0042098013480970
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