Publication Date
5-15-2025
Urban rewilding as an urban ecological regime is gaining momentum among public, policy, and practitioner communities. This pioneering special issue presents evidence and perspectives from researchers and practitioners from around the world. It explores the implications of rewilding from the point of view of species, multi-species communities, multifunctional landscapes, and the multiple stakeholders involved in the management of these landscapes. Social-ecological connectivity and community participation and representation form important pillars around which urban rewilding can be fostered. Praxis in urban ecosystem management is paving the way for nature to better support human and more-than-human health and wellbeing through rewilding.
Recommended Citation
Sardeshpande, Mallika and Russo, Alessio
(2025)
"Exploring How We Bring Nature Back to Cities,"
Cities and the Environment (CATE):
Vol. 18:
Iss.
1, Article 1.
DOI: 10.15365/cate.2025.180101
Available at:
https://digitalcommons.lmu.edu/cate/vol18/iss1/1
DOI
10.15365/cate.2025.180101