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Free Webinar: Green Metropolis: A Talk with the Author of a Seminal Work in the Field of Sustainability, April 18, 11:30am-1pm PST
Event Description
This presentation by The New Yorker staff writer, David Owen, will focus on the topic of his 2010 book, The Green Metropolis: Why Living Smaller, Living Closer, and Driving Less Are the Keys to Sustainability and the inherently sustainable aspects of urban living. David will talk about the efficiencies associated with cities in this introductory level webinar for anyone interested in conservation and sustainability.
Most Americans think of densely populated cities as ecological nightmares: wastelands of concrete and garbage and diesel fumes and traffic jams. But in comparison with suburbs, small towns, and rural areas, they are models of responsibility. Individually, city dwellers drive, pollute, consume, and throw away less than do average residents of the surrounding suburbs and exurbs, and they use less energy per capita and make far greater use of public transportation. The reason is that the tightly circumscribed spaces in which they live create efficiencies and reduce the possibilities for reckless consumption. Living in cities has obvious downsides, including the fact that urban density makes pandemics, wars, and natural disasters more efficient, too. Nevertheless, the environmental challenge we face, at the current stage of our assault on the world's non-renewable resources, is not how to make the world's teeming urban areas more like the pristine countryside. The true challenge is to make other settled places more like cities.
The objective of this course is that at the conclusion, participants will be able to:
David Owen is the author of The Green Metropolis.
- Green Metropolis presentation by David Owen
- Questions and answers
- Wrap-up
David Owen has been a staff writer at The New Yorker since 1991. He is the author of more than a dozen books, including Where the Water Goes: Life and Death Along the Colorado River, which grew out of a magazine piece published in 2015; “High School,” about the four months he spent pretending to be a high-school student; None of the Above: The Truth Behind the SATs, an exposé of the standardized-testing industry; Green Metropolis: Why Living Smaller, Living Closer, and Driving Less Are the Keys to Sustainability; The Conundrum: How Scientific Innovation, Increased Efficiency, and Good Intentions Can Make Our Energy and Climate Problems Worse; and Volume Control: Hearing in a Deafening World. Previously, Owen was a contributing editor at The Atlantic and a senior writer at Harper’s.
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