Chapman, R and Howden-Chapman, P (2021) Does reframing urban policy around wellbeing support carbon mitigation? Buildings and Cities, 2(1), pp. 688-699. ISSN 2632-6655
Abstract
New Zealand ('Aotearoa') is a highly urbanised country with one of the first governments in the world to adopt a wellbeing budget framework. That framework, in combination with the architecture for decarbonisation provided by New Zealand’s 2019 'Zero Carbon' Act, means there are now institutional and policy incentives in place, and developing incrementally, to combine the pursuit of wellbeing and decarbonisation. These incentives also align with the outcomes highlighted in the United Nations' Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). This paper considers the way policy and institutional approaches to carbon mitigation are being linked to wellbeing in three interconnected urban, non-agricultural domains responsible for much of New Zealand’s carbon emissions: building, urban form and transport. Looking beyond the current Covid-19 recovery process, emerging evidence is presented to ascertain whether the wellbeing-focused policy approach, with its associated attention to co-benefits, is creating a clear institutional refocusing. In addition, other evidence suggests that New Zealanders see health and wellbeing as improving, at the same time as the country is moving towards the net zero carbon emissions target.
Item Type: | Article |
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Uncontrolled Keywords: | building; co-benefits; mitigationpublic policy; New Zealand; transport; urban form; wellbeing |
Date Deposited: | 11 Apr 2025 12:43 |
Last Modified: | 11 Apr 2025 12:43 |