Submission Guidelines

The conference Urban Transitions: Proximity, Diversity and Collective Action invites the academic community, professionals, public decision-makers and civil society organisations to submit abstracts for parallel sessions. In a context marked by environmental crises, housing pressures, regional inequalities and changes in lifestyles and mobility, the event aims to explore urban transitions that foster proximity, diversity and collective action, bringing together scientific evidence, professional practice and institutional innovation.

We are seeking contributions that critically and practically explore how proximity (accessibility, the 15-minute city, services, opportunities), diversity (social, cultural and functional/morphological) and collective action (collaborative governance, participation, coproduction and co-creative networks) can inform policies, planning tools, methodologies and urban transformation projects.

Abstracts are invited for Communications in parallel sessions (research, practice, public policy, case studies).

Abstract format: up to 400 words, including objective, background, methodology, results (or expected results), and main contributions.

Language: Portuguese or English.


Abstract submission until 5 April 2026

Results notification until 10 April 2026

  1. Abstracts will be evaluated by the Scientific Committee, taking into account: relevance to the theme, clarity, methodological robustness, originality, and contribution to the discussion and/or practice of urban planning.

Themes

  • A. Proximity and accessibility

    Proximity as a condition for equity in access to services, facilities, and opportunities

    The “15-minute city”: critical perspectives, metrics, impacts, and limitations

    Accessibility, everyday time use, gender, care, and mobility

    Proximity infrastructure (healthcare, education, culture, retail, green spaces)

  • B. Urban diversity and functional mix

    Mixed land use and urban vitality: benefits, conflicts, and regulation

    Transformations in local commerce and neighbourhood economies

    Urban morphologies, density, compactness, and the quality of public space

    Social and cultural diversity, integration, and the right to the city

  • C. Housing, inequalities and territorial cohesion

    Housing crisis, regulation, and policy instruments (rental, short-term lets, public housing stock, cooperatives)

    Gentrification, touristification, and financialisation

    Territorial inequalities, peripheries, medium-sized cities, and urban–rural relationships

  • D. Ecological transition and resilience

    Climate adaptation, mitigation, and planning oriented towards carbon neutrality

    Nature-based solutions, water, urban heat islands, and urban biodiversity

    Energy, circularity, materials, and just socio-ecological transitions

  • E. Collective action, governance and implementation

    Collaborative governance, co-production, and informed participation

    Urban conflicts, mediation, and spatial and environmental justice

    Institutional innovation, municipal capacity, and inter-municipal/metropolitan cooperation

    Policy evaluation and knowledge transfer (academia–municipalities–communities)

  • F. Methods, data and experimentation

    Indicators and mapping of proximity/accessibility

    Participatory methods, urban ethnography, living labs, and experimentation

    Big data, mobile data, GIS, mixed methods, and impact assessment

Abstract submission is carried out via your personal conference area.

powered by eventQualia