Measuring the sustainability of Russia's Arctic cities

How sustainable are Russia's Arctic cities? Russia's far north metropolises are distinctive from other Arctic cities in terms of their large size, efforts to conquer nature, and big business' impact on the urban landscape. The Russian Arctic cities' Soviet-era design gave them co...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Published in:Ambio
Main Authors: Orttung R.W., Anisimov O., Badina S., Burns C., Cho L., DiNapoli B., Jull M., Shaiman M., Shapovalova K., Silinsky L., Zhang E., Zhiltcova Y.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: SPRINGER
Subjects:
Online Access:https://repository.rudn.ru/records/article/record/77573/
id ftrudnuniv:oai:repository.rudn.ru:r/77573
record_format openpolar
spelling ftrudnuniv:oai:repository.rudn.ru:r/77573 2023-05-15T14:32:47+02:00 Measuring the sustainability of Russia's Arctic cities Orttung R.W. Anisimov O. Badina S. Burns C. Cho L. DiNapoli B. Jull M. Shaiman M. Shapovalova K. Silinsky L. Zhang E. Zhiltcova Y. https://repository.rudn.ru/records/article/record/77573/ EN eng SPRINGER https://doi.org/10.1007/s13280-020-01395-9 https://repository.rudn.ru/records/article/record/77573/ AMBIO Arctic cities Russia Sustainability Article ftrudnuniv https://doi.org/10.1007/s13280-020-01395-9 2022-01-03T09:53:07Z How sustainable are Russia's Arctic cities? Russia's far north metropolises are distinctive from other Arctic cities in terms of their large size, efforts to conquer nature, and big business' impact on the urban landscape. The Russian Arctic cities' Soviet-era design gave them compact and dense population structures. Such features led to many benefits for achieving sustainability, including more efficient energy use, a larger number of hospital beds, more numerous cultural amenities, and greater access to public transportation. However, Arctic cities outside of Russia have made progress in their own pursuit of sustainability through on-going investments, business development, educational resources, and solid waste management. By teasing out these distinctions, this article highlights urban features that make it possible for the cities to adapt to changes in the global environment and economy. In doing so, it provides the first multidisciplinary, comparative analysis of 46 Arctic cities employing historical, remote sensing, and quantitative methods. It demonstrates the strengths and weaknesses of the world's Arctic cities in their quest for sustainability and points to where they can learn from each other in adopting best practices. Article in Journal/Newspaper Arctic Peoples' Friendship University of Russia (RUDN): Open repository Arctic Ambio 50 11 2090 2103
institution Open Polar
collection Peoples' Friendship University of Russia (RUDN): Open repository
op_collection_id ftrudnuniv
language English
topic Arctic cities
Russia
Sustainability
spellingShingle Arctic cities
Russia
Sustainability
Orttung R.W.
Anisimov O.
Badina S.
Burns C.
Cho L.
DiNapoli B.
Jull M.
Shaiman M.
Shapovalova K.
Silinsky L.
Zhang E.
Zhiltcova Y.
Measuring the sustainability of Russia's Arctic cities
topic_facet Arctic cities
Russia
Sustainability
description How sustainable are Russia's Arctic cities? Russia's far north metropolises are distinctive from other Arctic cities in terms of their large size, efforts to conquer nature, and big business' impact on the urban landscape. The Russian Arctic cities' Soviet-era design gave them compact and dense population structures. Such features led to many benefits for achieving sustainability, including more efficient energy use, a larger number of hospital beds, more numerous cultural amenities, and greater access to public transportation. However, Arctic cities outside of Russia have made progress in their own pursuit of sustainability through on-going investments, business development, educational resources, and solid waste management. By teasing out these distinctions, this article highlights urban features that make it possible for the cities to adapt to changes in the global environment and economy. In doing so, it provides the first multidisciplinary, comparative analysis of 46 Arctic cities employing historical, remote sensing, and quantitative methods. It demonstrates the strengths and weaknesses of the world's Arctic cities in their quest for sustainability and points to where they can learn from each other in adopting best practices.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Orttung R.W.
Anisimov O.
Badina S.
Burns C.
Cho L.
DiNapoli B.
Jull M.
Shaiman M.
Shapovalova K.
Silinsky L.
Zhang E.
Zhiltcova Y.
author_facet Orttung R.W.
Anisimov O.
Badina S.
Burns C.
Cho L.
DiNapoli B.
Jull M.
Shaiman M.
Shapovalova K.
Silinsky L.
Zhang E.
Zhiltcova Y.
author_sort Orttung R.W.
title Measuring the sustainability of Russia's Arctic cities
title_short Measuring the sustainability of Russia's Arctic cities
title_full Measuring the sustainability of Russia's Arctic cities
title_fullStr Measuring the sustainability of Russia's Arctic cities
title_full_unstemmed Measuring the sustainability of Russia's Arctic cities
title_sort measuring the sustainability of russia's arctic cities
publisher SPRINGER
url https://repository.rudn.ru/records/article/record/77573/
geographic Arctic
geographic_facet Arctic
genre Arctic
genre_facet Arctic
op_source AMBIO
op_relation https://doi.org/10.1007/s13280-020-01395-9
https://repository.rudn.ru/records/article/record/77573/
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1007/s13280-020-01395-9
container_title Ambio
container_volume 50
container_issue 11
container_start_page 2090
op_container_end_page 2103
_version_ 1766306131707166720