Abstract

Climate change and metropolitan areas are mutually connected. On the one hand, metropolitan areas contribute to climate change through production of greenhouse gases emissions. On the other hand, it is likely that climate-generated stressors will affect many aspects of life in metropolitan areas. Such impact-feedback interactions can change residential mobility patterns, and thereby alter spatial patterns in metropolitan areas. This paper focuses on climate impacts and corresponding transformations in household mobility and housing consumption behaviors at three spatial scales.

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