Michel Lussault

Article
Article

In the School of the Urban Anthopocene

The challenge of the Anthropocene must be addressed through cities, not only because they cluster challenges, but also because, according to Michel Lussault, their desirability will not decline in spite of various crises. The urbanity specific to the “relational city” remains crucial as an experience of otherness, and, in that respect, going full digital or generalized teleworking would represent a “counter-social” development. The increasing complexity of our global urbanization reinforces the systemic inscription of cities and drives urbanism towards ever-increasing levels of cross-disciplinarity, an approach he promotes at the École Urbaine de Lyon, in particular around the “common health” concept, intended to spatially approach issues of social justice, public healthcare, and ecosystem restoration.

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Vidéo

Caring for the relational city

Geographer and Director of the École Urbaine de Lyon, Michel Lussault brings attention back to the forefront of urban planning, via the One Health concept. He thinks through the pandemic, which accelerated the dematerialization of human interactions, inviting us to ponder which relations should absolutely be protected.

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Inhabiting the World

Michel Lussault

Article

Inhabiting the World

The year 1972 probably stands as a watershed in human history given that with Blue Marble, a photo taken by Apollo 12, humanity was able to contemplate for the first time the outer boundaries of its territory, completing the cycle of the conquest of the planet initiated by modernity. Yet also, with the publication of the Limits to Growth report, it realized what the adverse consequences of this continuous conquest were. For Stream, the geographer Michel Lussault reflects on the urban revolution and exposes how much it modifies our way of inhabiting the Earth, the World with a capital “W”, as if to signify this new human condition, before proposing an approach of cities in terms of spatialities rather than spaces, in an effort to better address the challenges of the urban revolution. Michel Lussault is a geographer, professor at ENS Lyon, and director of the Institut Français d’Éducation. He is also the president of the architectural center Arc-en-Rêve in Bordeaux.

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Eager to share more generously the results of its collaborations and research, PCA-STREAM publishes STREAM VOICES, its online magazine!

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