Urban Movements and the Challenges of the European City

Author(s):  
Oriol Nel·lo
Erdkunde ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 68 (2) ◽  
pp. 71-83 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mareike Buttstädt ◽  
Christoph Schneider
Keyword(s):  

2020 ◽  
Vol 46 (1) ◽  
pp. 139-153
Author(s):  
Stavros Stavrides

This paper explores a renewed problematization of contemporary metropolises' dynamics in the light of speci fic efforts to reclaim the city as commons. Building on Lefebvre's theorizations of the city's virtuality and comparing it to contemporary approaches to the urban condition that emphasize the potentialities of contemporary city-life, it suggests that urban commoning is unleashing the power of collective creativity and collaboration. Struggles to appropriate the city as a crucial milieu for sharing transforms parts of city and produces new patterns of urban living. Examples from Latin American urban movements focused on establishing emancipatory housing conditions are used to illustrate the transformative capabilities of urban commoning.


Sensors ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 21 (10) ◽  
pp. 3426
Author(s):  
Magdalena Paulina Buras ◽  
Fernando Solano Donado

Harsh pollutants that are illegally disposed in the sewer network may spread beyond the sewer network—e.g., through leakages leading to groundwater reservoirs—and may also impair the correct operation of wastewater treatment plants. Consequently, such pollutants pose serious threats to water bodies, to the natural environment and, therefore, to all life. In this article, we focus on the problem of identifying a wastewater pollutant and localizing its source point in the wastewater network, given a time-series of wastewater measurements collected by sensors positioned across the sewer network. We provide a solution to the problem by solving two linked sub-problems. The first sub-problem concerns the detection and identification of the flowing pollutants in wastewater, i.e., assessing whether a given time-series corresponds to a contamination event and determining what the polluting substance caused it. This problem is solved using random forest classifiers. The second sub-problem relates to the estimation of the distance between the point of measurement and the pollutant source, when considering the outcome of substance identification sub-problem. The XGBoost algorithm is used to predict the distance from the source to the sensor. Both of the models are trained using simulated electrical conductivity and pH measurements of wastewater in sewers of a european city sub-catchment area. Our experiments show that: (a) resulting precision and recall values of the solution to the identification sub-problem can be both as high as 96%, and that (b) the median of the error that is obtained for the estimation of the source location sub-problem can be as low as 6.30 m.


Urban Europe ◽  
2016 ◽  
pp. 293-300
Author(s):  
Eberhard Van Der Laan
Keyword(s):  

Gragoatá ◽  
2004 ◽  
Vol 8 (14) ◽  
Author(s):  
Gregory Woods
Keyword(s):  
Cold War ◽  

Weimar Berlin became the European city of erotic dreams and moral nightmares. Berlin became the symbol both of the wonderful things that could be achieved if one fought for them and of the terrible things that might happen if one did not fight against them. The openness and proliferation of Berlin's homosexual life was both a promise and a threat. Weimar's legacy was not so much the vengeful righteousness of Nazism as the efficient fervour with which queer Berlin re-established itself and thrived after the war, even at the hostile epicentre of the Cold War.------------------------------------------------------------------------------A reputação sodomita de Weimar BerlinA Berlim da República de Weimar tornou-se a cidade européia, por excelência, dos sonhos eróticos e dos pesadelos morais. Berlim tornou-se o símbolo tanto das coisas maravilhosas que poderiam ser alcançadas se se lutasse por elas, quanto das coisas terríveis que poderiam acontecer se não se lutasse contra elas. A proliferação e a visibilidade da vida homossexual berlinense era tanto uma promessa quanto uma ameaça. O legado de Weimar não foi tanto o moralismo vingativo do Nazismo, quanto o fervor eficaz com o qual a Berlim queer conseguiu se reestabelecer e prosperar depois da guerra, apesar de estar no hostil epicentro da Guerra Fria.---Artigo em inglês


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