William Solecki (Ph.D. Geography) has studied the interaction of urbanization and climate change for almost thirty years. He has served as an author on several Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) assessments and is a co-founder of the Urban Climate Change Research Network (UCCRN). He is a Fellow of the American Association of Geographers.
‘Part of the fascination of urbanization is the ability of urban places to simultaneously be a source of crisis, and also its solutions. Solecki’s analysis brings this tension to the fore. He helps the reader to scrutinise trajectories of urban risk and resilience as expressions of imbalance in power, knowledge and action. This is an important book for all those interested in the progressive potential - and wary of the regressive danger - of cities: students, scholars, policy makers and committed city dwellers. This is a guide to understanding the forces shaping who wins and losses (including the non-human), in struggles for sustainability across the urbanized world we are making together.’ Mark Pelling, University College London ‘This excellent book is an important read for any member of the public interested in how we can urgently address climate change, and is essential for students interested in learning more about effective and significant action to mitigate against climate breakdown. Bill Solecki is one of the world's leading experts on city based climate action, and the book reflects his deep commitment to this issue. It will benefit researchers, practitioners and policy makers not just interested in climate breakdown - although we all must be - but also in areas such as sustainability, urban studies, planning, and public policy. It's an important and essential work. Bravo!’ David Miller, former Mayor of Toronto and author of Solved: How the Great Cities of the World are Fixing the Climate Crisis ‘Solecki offers a masterful synthesis of interdisciplinary research on urbanization and environmental change, crafting a practical and adaptable framework for understanding the evolving relationship between cities and the environment. Drawing on a rich tapestry of global case studies and historical insights, this book provides a structured yet flexible lens for examining urban transformation across time and place. Essential reading for big-picture urbanists, planners, and sustainability scholars alike.’ Michail Fragkias, Boise State University