timothy
beatley 
Keynote:
“Sustainability in the International
Context”
MP3
Audio Recording of Keynote
Bio: Timothy Beatley is Teresa Heinz
Professor of Sustainable Communities, in the Department
of Urban and Environmental Planning, School of Architecture
at the University of Virginia, where he has taught for
the last eighteen years. His primary teaching and research
interests are in environmental planning and policy,
with special emphasis on coastal and natural hazards
planning, environmental values and ethics, and biodiversity
conservation. He has published extensively in these
areas, including the following recent books: Ethical
Land Use (Johns Hopkins University Press, 1994);
Habitat Conservation Planning: Endangered Species
and Urban Growth (University of Texas Press, 1994),
Natural Hazard Mitigation (Island Press, 1999,
with David Godschalk and others); and An Introduction
to Coastal Zone Management (Island Press, 2002,
Second Edition, with David Brower and Anna Schwab).
In recent years much of his research and writing has
been focused on the subject of sustainable communities,
and creative strategies by which cities and towns can
fundamentally reduce their ecological footprints, while
at the same time becoming more livable and equitable
places. To this end, he is the recent author of The
Ecology of Place (Island Press, 1997), with Kristy
Manning, which reviews innovative local sustainability
practice from around the country and provides practical
guidance on creating more sustainable urban form, restorative
local economies, and stronger communities. Beatley has
recently returned from a year’s research in Europe,
specifically examining the experiences of some 30 cities,
in twelve European countries. The findings of this study
have been published in a recent book entitled Green
Urbanism: Learning from European Cities (Island
Press, 2000). He is also the author of a new book Native
to Nowhere: Sustaining Home and Community in a Global
Age (also published by Island Press, December,
2004).
Beatley holds a PhD in City and Regional Planning from
the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
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