
James Bonner
Glasgow
Dr. James Bonner is a Research Associate at the University of Strathclyde in Glasgow, Scotland. His interests and background are in a range of interdisciplinary research issues and themes including water, trees, place and mobility. He is particularly interested in the relationships between people and society to the places and spaces they inhabit and encounter. Tam Dean Burn has been a professional actor across platforms for over forty years and a performer, particularly of musical, for even longer. He is also a very active activist in local, national and international campaigns and it was in one of those- Every Tree Tells a Story (ETTAS) – that he met James. They began working together on an ETTAS postcard distribution to 150 local schoolchildren and are delighted to be invited to partner up for this amazing initiative. Dr. James Bonner is a Research Associate at the University of Strathclyde in Glasgow, Scotland. His interests and background are in a range of interdisciplinary research issues and themes including water, trees, place and mobility. He is particularly interested in the relationships between people and society to the places and spaces they inhabit and encounter. Tam Dean Burn has been a professional actor across platforms for over forty years and a performer, particularly of musical, for even longer. He is also a very active activist in local, national and international campaigns and it was in one of those- Every Tree Tells a Story (ETTAS) – that he met James. They began working together on an ETTAS postcard distribution to 150 local schoolchildren and are delighted to be invited to partner up for this amazing initiative.
More by this author at The Nature of Cities
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Whimsy. Is there a role for laughter, subversive curve balls, ironic romance and “oh wow that’s cool” moments in the mainstreaming of knowledge and action in sustainability, climate change, and biodiversity?
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The goal is to mainstream Nature-based Solutions, by widening public acceptance and making it the standard and default practice of urban design. What will it take to get there?