2018
DOI: 10.1080/00038628.2018.1505598
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Abstract: The Circular Economy (CE) is receiving interest worldwide as a way to overcome the currently dominating linear and wasteful production and consumption models of our society. Currently the implementation of CE thinking into practice is still in an early stage. As the main hubs of consumption and to a more limited extent also, production, metropolitan areas often are seen as crucial to achieving a successful transition towards a CE, and therefore it is necessary to find ways to integrate a CE based approach into… Show more

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Cited by 19 publications
(8 citation statements)
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“…Avoiding traps and moving back into the DOS requires UWSS governance approaches that are desirable from a sustainability perspective, i.e. that optimize resource use across sectors in a circular economy [59,60], including the use of renewable energy in the water sector [37,61], the reuse of water, waste, and nutrients [35,36]. Design of modular, coordinated, flexible and participatory systems are needed, in which information is shared and stakeholders are linked across hierarchies and sectors, from decision-makers, managers and operators to the served community [62][63][64][65].…”
Section: Desirable and Viable Operating Spacesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Avoiding traps and moving back into the DOS requires UWSS governance approaches that are desirable from a sustainability perspective, i.e. that optimize resource use across sectors in a circular economy [59,60], including the use of renewable energy in the water sector [37,61], the reuse of water, waste, and nutrients [35,36]. Design of modular, coordinated, flexible and participatory systems are needed, in which information is shared and stakeholders are linked across hierarchies and sectors, from decision-makers, managers and operators to the served community [62][63][64][65].…”
Section: Desirable and Viable Operating Spacesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Therefore, it does not consider also the dynamic characteristics of livelihood resilience as well as the migration decisions (migration and non-migration), pattern, extent, and scope over the time. Recently, scientists have been incorporating technology in understanding the SESs by employing the Social-Ecological-Technical System (SETS) approach [42,43]. This study also does not consider the contribution of the technologies to the changes in an SES, which refers to the importance of the impacts of technology on the resilient capacity of the individual or the community.…”
Section: Drawback and Critiquesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This method is based on the Netzstadt approach (Baccini & Oswald, 2008) and combines urban morphological as well as urban physiological methods to understand which spatial systems and their potential adaptations in a region are crucial to support the CE transition. The second one-week 6-introduced the students to a multisize (micro, meso, macro), multi-geoscale (processes located at different geographical scales), and multidisciplinary sustainability assessment framework (Taelman, Tonini, Wandl, & Dewulf, 2018) for assessing and further developing their spatial strategy.…”
Section: Urbanism Msc Course "Spatial Strategies For the Global Metropolis"mentioning
confidence: 99%