Anna-Katharina Brenner
Anna-Katharina Brenner MSc.
Status Currently not employed at BOKU
Career
- 2019 Researcher at the Institute of Social Ecology
- 2019 - 2019 Researcher at the Institute of Sociology, University of Vienna (Urban Studies)
- 2015 - 2019 Masterprogramme in Human and Social Ecology (Environmental Justice)
Projects
0 Projects found.
Publications
Knowledge Transfer to Society
Media
Lectures
Year: 2022 - Learning from the past for transforming towards sustainability: Tracing the regulation and the manifestation of sprawled urban land use patterns in Vienna agglomeration
Autoren: Brenner, AK
Event: 2. Augsburger Forschungswerkstatt 2022 - the plurality of political ecology
Year: 2022 - Learning form the past for the transformation towards sustainability: 35 years of densification and expansion in Vienna
Autoren: Brenner, AK; Matej, S; Krüger, T; Behnisch, M; Haberl, H; Haas, W
Event: 14th ISIE SEM Conference 2022 - Transforming socio-economic metabolism in times of multiple crises
Year: 2021 - Transforming Cities via experimental planning interventions: Socio-spatial benefits and contestations of superblocks in Vienna
Autoren: Brenner, AK
Event: IRS Seminar (Leibniz-Institut für Raumbezogene Sozialforschung)
Year: 2021 - Potentials and barriers of superblocks to contribute towards a low carbon transition in Vienna
Autoren: Brenner, AK; Rudloff, C; Lorenz, F; Wieser, G; Haas, W; Pichler, M; Wiedenhofer, D; Haberl, H
Event: IOER Annual Conference 2021: Space Transformation
Year: 2021 - Transforming Cities via Experimental Urban Planning Interventions: Potentials and Barriers of Superblocks to Contribute towards a Sustainability Transition in Vienna
Autoren: Brenner, AK; Haas, W
Event: International research workshop: Can we experiment ourselves out of the socio-ecological crisis?
Year: 2020 - Challenging car dependent geographies through changes in the stock-flow-service nexus: Possibilities and obstacles of superblock implementation in Vienna
Autoren: Brenner, AK; Virág, D; Haas, W
Event: Expert Workshop on potential transformation pathways of the Stock-Flow-Service-Nexus, focusing on the case of Vienna and interrogating novel planning interventions such as superblocks to reshape (peri) urban mobility