Meet the Author:
Chan-Won Lee,  Changwon

Many voices. Greener cities. Better cities.
Chan-Won Lee

Chan-Won Lee

Dr. Lee, Chan Won is a professor at the Department of Urban Environmental Engineering of Kyungnam University, South Korea. He joined APEC MRC (Marine Resource Conservation) W/G as a Korean delegate from 1992 to 1998, was a chairman in the 10th APEC MRC meeting. He has been a chair of Community Advisory Council for Masan Bay since 2005. His contribution was extended to wetlands management including services of Korean Wetland Society as a vice president and advisor, and hosting 2008 COP 10 of Ramsar Convention in Korea followed by the activities of preparation and side events during COP 10. He served as a director of CRERC (Coastal Resource and Environment Research Center) assigned in 1999 by the Ministry of Science and Technology, Korea for 10 years. He is now a chairman of Changwon Local Agenda 21 and Environment Capital Changwon Forum as well.

October, 2024

16 October 2024

An election poster
Why I’m Voting for a Multispecies Future
Christopher Kennedy, San Francisco

The notion of giving voice to more-than-human communities has long been of interest to artists, activists, and change-makers worldwide. Though still emerging, movements like the rights of nature have increasingly advocated for granting natural entities—rivers, forests, ecosystems—legal standing, akin to the rights given to people or corporations. Over the past...

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4 October 2024

Two side by side Google Maps images. Left a dense forested aerial view. Right a crowded neighborhood with streets lined with houses
We Need New Indicators to Understand Whether Greener Neighborhoods Reduce Obesity
Takemi Sugiyama, Melbourne Manoj Chandrabose, Melbourne Nyssa Hadgraft, Melbourne Suzanne Mavoa, Melbourne

Obesity imposes a heavy burden on individuals and societies (Boutari and Mantzoros, 2022). Since obesity is difficult to cure and often coexists with other chronic conditions, public health efforts to prevent obesity are needed (McNally, 2024). However, a strategy focusing on individuals, simply telling people to eat less and exercise...

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September, 2024

15 September 2024

A group of people holding signs in front of trees
On The Psychology of Trees and How to Change It
Tim Beatley, Charlottesville

I have come to believe that in the fight to save trees and forests in our cities, it is necessary to better understand what I am calling the “psychology of trees”, those factors and influences and patterns of thinking that affect the decisions individuals, developers, and even entire communities, make...

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4 September 2024

A wall with several house martin nests made up underneath the roofline
Soft Animal
Andreas Weber, Berlin

Did you know that baby housemartins speak in their sleep? I did not ― until some nights ago in early July. I was walking down the deserted main road outside Varese Ligure, an old-fashioned Italian mountain town. It was the evening of the day I had arrived. Following the dimly...

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August, 2024

22 August 2024

A picture of a root bridge over a river
Granularity, Dynamism, and Embodiment at The Nature of Cities Festival 2024
Natalie Pierson, New York City

I recently attended The Nature of Cities Festival (TNOC Festival) in Berlin, Germany, where I hosted a session with colleagues on the Global Roadmap for the Nature-based solutions for Urban Resilience in the Anthropocene (NATURA), a National Science Foundation research initiative co-led by the Urban Systems Lab. TNOC Festival uniquely...

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