Interdisciplinary Research Program – TUDelft Faculty of Architecture and the Built Environment
Out now: Journal of Delta Urbanism #5 – Accidents

JDU is a project by Delta Urbanism Research Group and DIMI Delft Deltas, Infrastructure and Mobility Initiative Delft University of Technology

Chief Editors: Baukje Kothuis, Fransje Hooimeijer, Taneha Kuzniecow Bacchin, Delft University of Technology.

Editors JDU#5: Luca Iuorio, Tara Kanj, Delft University of Technology.

Editorial Board JDU#5: Elena Longin, Fransje Hooimeijer, Luca Iuorio, Maryam Naghibi, Sophia Arbara, Tara Kanj, Delft University of Technology.

Publisher: TU Delft OPEN

Subscription and Printing on Demand
Open access journal: available subscription and printing on demand on the journal website
For subscriptions and any further information: jdu-bouwkunde[at]tudelft.nl

Edited by Luca Iuorio and Tara Kanj
Worldwide, climate-related disasters are becoming increasingly common, resulting in severe destruction, loss of life, political uncertainty, climate migrations, and the extinction of numerous plant and animal species. As a result, forces of nature are often viewed as an adversary, something to fear and guard against. This perspective has led to the idea of nature as something malevolent and dangerous, even in the scientific debate, promoting the flawed notion that the changing climate must be controlled and corrected through technological means.
However, it is necessary to acknowledge that for centuries we have deliberately extracted material from the soil, constructed megacities on floodplains, confined wide river meanders within narrow canals, built dams and reservoirs on geological fault lines, established petrochemical plants in rare biodiversity regions, and developed agricultural land below sea level or in the deserts. Since the Industrial Revolution, in the name of progress, we have increasingly tried to dominate nature through technological advancements, believing we could control the water cycles, temperatures, species evolution, and geological dynamics. Yet, we are ultimately realizing that these are natural processes that lie beyond our control.
This issue of the Journal of Delta Urbanism seeks to redefine natural disasters as human-induced accidents, aiming to reshape our understanding of nature, human impact, and climate change. It promotes the perspective that these phenomena are inextricably inherent and immutable, urging the envisioning of new ways of living, designing new forms of adaptation rather than fostering attempts at control or fixing nature.
https://journals.open.tudelft.nl/jdu/issue/view/1036
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