- 91ÅÝܽ
- Current Research
- SAGA: Translanguaging and Sustainability
- Research Team
- 2023 CO-LAB IN SYDHAVN
- 2024 CO-LAB IN HELSINKI
- 2025 CO-LAB IN PARIS
- Dynamic Language Demands for Ecological Transition of Cities
- Key Dimensions of Language and Terminology : City as Habitat in Space and Time
- Key Dimensions of Language and Terminology : Inviting Cultural Vernaculars
- Key Dimensions of Language and Terminology: Real-Time Updates to the Evolving Language of Urban Practice in Ecological Transition
- Innovation in Urban Transition Practice: Putting Transition in Place in Arcueil and the Plateau de Saclay
- Key Dimensions of Language and Terminology: Political Ecological Translations
- Losing the Edge of the Translation: Gated or Green; Shrinking or Degrowth
- Call for Abstracts
- Open Positions
- Urban Innovation Lab
- SAGA: Translanguaging and Sustainability
- Opportunities
- Partners
Regulation formalizes practices that are legally expected. Sustainability, long advanced in planning and urban policy practices as a normatively good thing, is also now put forward in regulations.
Regulating sustainability, such as via the evolution of the BC buliding codes discussed in Holden's chapter in this book, moves sustainable planning practices into a different position in social systems. You can find this book at the or from the .
What are the possibilities and limitations of rules, plans, practices, institutions, and agency, when it comes to sustainable development?