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Human-Nature Encounters in Urban Space

Megan Lynn Maurer

Thursday 20 November, 2025
13.00-14.00 CET (Stockholm, Berlin, Rome)

Photo of a sidewalk with graffiti on an old building, the sidewalk is lined with trees and plants.
Photo: Megan Lynn Maurer

Seminar 

In this era of overlapping crises, the future of cities remains uncertain. Urban nature-based solutions (NbS) and green infrastructure (GI) have emerged as key strategies to address climate change, biodiversity loss, public health concerns, and rapid urbanization. Both approaches emphasize increasing the presence of nature in urban environments.

Historically, cities have been spaces where boundaries are both challenged and reinforced—whether social boundaries related to race, class, and gender, or conceptual divisions between humans and nature. NbS and GI offer opportunities to rethink these boundaries by exploring new ways for humans and more-than-human life to coexist, while also questioning the spatial and conceptual separations between people and nature.

However, as urban nature becomes more visible and widespread, it can also intensify conflicts over space and reinforce boundary-making. In particular, distinctions between "good" nature—manageable and useful to humans—and "bad" nature—unruly and resistant—become more pronounced.

In this seminar, Megan Lynn Maurer examines this tension through examples from New York City, focusing on street tree maintenance and perceptions of ecosystem disservices. She explores how everyday experiences become sites where human-nature boundaries are negotiated and reshaped, even as urban planning discourses continue to draw lines between desirable and undesirable forms of nature. Maurer concludes by reflecting on the gap between how urban NbS and GI are framed in policy and planning, and how residents actually perceive and interact with urban nature—offering insights into how these relationships and meanings might evolve.

The presentation will be followed by a discussion with the Öresund Comparative Borderland Research Group, and questions from participants. The seminar is held on Zoom and open to the public.

Megan Lynn Maurer

Megan Lynn Maurer is an Assistant Professor of Digital Green Transitions at the IT University of Copenhagen. Trained as a cultural anthropologist, her research explores the relationships between people and plants in urban environments. She works across disciplines to examine how plant life in cities shapes human experiences of nature, everyday life, and future imaginaries in the context of climate crisis. 

Her work focuses on:

  • How "undesirable" aspects of nature influence human perceptions and preferences in cities;
  • The role of care—for both human and more-than-human beings—in maintaining urban social-ecological-technological systems;
  • Applying feminist science and technology studies and critical infrastructure studies to the design, planning, and governance of NbS and GI, with the goal of creating more just and inclusive urban futures.

Link

https://lu-se.zoom.us/j/68345990321?pwd=V2x2JVb21j7WuMwmNYShH9eOhzYR2R.1

About the series

The seminar series Border Allies, Boundary Alliances is arranged by the Öresund Comparative Borderland Research Group, funded by CEMES

Technical info 

If you want to ask questions or make comments, please use a headset with a microphone. In addition to the link above, you can participate by calling in, please write to Mia Krokstäde at mia [dot] krokstade [at] cors [dot] lu [dot] se (mia[dot]krokstade[at]cors[dot]lu[dot]se) for information on this.

Contact

Johanna Rivano Eckerdal

Head of Centre for Oresund Region Studies

johanna [dot] rivano_eckerdal [at] kultur [dot] lu [dot] se (johanna[dot]rivano_eckerdal[at]kultur[dot]lu[dot]se)
+46 46 222 30 35