The entrepreneurial city of Kelapa Gading, Jakarta
In: Journal of urbanism: international research on placemaking and urban sustainability, Band 7, Heft 2, S. 130-151
ISSN: 1754-9183
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In: Journal of urbanism: international research on placemaking and urban sustainability, Band 7, Heft 2, S. 130-151
ISSN: 1754-9183
Intro -- Acknowledgements -- Contents -- Part IPolitics of Contagion -- 1 Urbanizing -- 1.1 Introduction -- 1.1.1 Two Contentions -- 1.1.2 Manifold Urbanisms -- 1.2 Security and Order -- 1.2.1 Post-conflict Cities -- 1.2.2 Divided Cities -- 1.2.3 Insurgent Citizens -- 1.3 Surveillance and Collectivity -- 1.3.1 De-modernization -- 1.3.2 Unjust Urbanisms -- 1.3.3 A Spinozist Ontology -- 1.3.4 Civil War Again -- 1.4 Planetary Urbanism -- 1.4.1 Urban Fabrics -- 1.4.2 The 'Urban Age' -- 1.4.3 A New Epistemology -- 1.4.4 New Urban Spaces -- 1.4.5 Birth of the Urban -- 1.5 Conclusion -- 1.5.1 Governmentality of the Urban -- 1.5.2 Urbanizing Security -- References -- 2 Cholera -- 2.1 Introduction -- 2.1.1 Social Medicine -- 2.2 Securing Disease -- 2.2.1 Noso-Politics -- 2.2.2 Somatocracy -- 2.2.3 Disease Does not Exist -- 2.2.4 Living Conditions and Pre-dispositions -- 2.2.5 Infection or Contagion -- 2.2.6 Aptitude and Immunity -- 2.2.7 Planetary Coding -- 2.3 Pandemics -- 2.3.1 The Cholera Epidemics -- 2.3.2 Treating Disease and Managing Risk: Differential Foci -- 2.3.3 Plague as Allegory in Civic Perfection -- 2.3.4 Urban Sanitation: The Bio-Politics of Liberalism -- 2.4 Biopolitics and Liberalism -- 2.4.1 Governmental Rationality of the Bio-Political: Liberalism -- 2.4.2 Neo-Liberalism and Environmental Responsibility -- 2.4.3 Greening the Entrepreneurial Self -- 2.5 Conclusion -- 2.5.1 Post-political Welfare -- References -- 3 Sub-prime -- 3.1 Introduction -- 3.1.1 Economic Health -- 3.1.2 Households -- 3.1.3 Securitizing Health -- 3.1.4 Commercializing Disease -- 3.1.5 Technologies of Security -- 3.2 Welfare Housing -- 3.2.1 Urban Determinants of the Global Financial Crisis -- 3.2.2 Architectural Agency: The Crisis of Modern Architecture -- 3.2.3 The Interventionist City and Truman's Fair Deal -- 3.2.4 Housing the Poor: Self-as-Enterprise.
1. Introduction / Andres Luque-Ayala, Colin McFarlane and Simon Marvin -- 2. Smart cities and the politics of urban data / Rob Kitchin, Tracey P. Lauriault and Gavin McArdle -- 3. IBM and the visual formation of smart cities / Donald McNeill -- 4. The smart entrepreneurial city : Dholera and 100 other utopias in India / Ayona Datta -- 5. Getting smart about cities in Cape Town : beyond the rhetoric / Nancy Odendaal -- 6. Programming environments : environmentality and citizen sensing in the smart city / Jennifer Gabrys -- 7. Smart city initiatives and the Foucauldian logics of governing through code / Francisco R. Klauser and Ola Soderstrom -- 8. Geographies of smart urban power / Gareth Powells, Harriet Bulkeley and Anthony McLean -- 9. Test bed as urban epistemology / Nerea Calvillo. [et al.] -- 10. Beyond the corporate smart city? Glimpses of other possibilities of smartness / Robert G. Hollands -- 11. Conclusion / Colin McFarlane, Simon Marvin and Andres Luque-Ayala.
In: Springer eBook Collection
Chapter 1. Introduction. Climate Urbanism: towards a critical research agenda; Vanesa Castán Broto, Enora Robin and Aidan While -- PART 1: What is climate urbanism? -- Chapter 2. For a minor perspective on climate urbanism: towards a decolonial research praxis; Enora Robin, Linda Westman and Vanesa Castán Broto -- Chapter 3. Climate urbanism and the implications for the climate apartheid; Joshua Long, Jennifer L. Rice and Anthony Levenda -- Chapter 4. New Climate Urbanism or Old Capitalism with climate characteristics?; Linda Shi -- Chapter 5. Understanding the governance of a New Climate Urbanism; Sirkku Juhola -- PART 2: Climate urbanism and transformative action -- Chapter 6. Urban climate imaginaries and climate urbanism; Linda Westman and Vanesa Castán Broto -- Chapter 7. Institutional dynamics of transformative climate urbanism: remaking rules in messy contexts; James Patterson -- Chapter 8. Urban resilience and the politics of development; Eric Chu -- Chapter 9. Two cheers for 'entrepreneurial climate urbanism' in the conservative city; Corina McKendry -- PART 3: The knowledge politics of climate urbanism -- Chapter 10. An adaptation agenda for the new climate urbanism: global insights; Marta Olazabal -- Chapter 11. The New Climate Urbanism: a physical, social, and behavioural framework; Luna Khirfan -- Chapter 12. Collaborative education as a 'New (urban) Civil Politics of climate change'; Andrew Kythreotis and Theresa Mercer -- PART 4: Climate urbanism as a new communal project -- Chapter 13 Community energy resilience for a New Climate Urbanism; Long Seng To -- Chapter 14. Making climate urbanism from the grassroots: eco-communities, experiments and divergent temporalities; Jenny Pickerill -- Chapter 15. Conclusions. Three modalities for a New Climate Urbanism; Vanesa Castán Broto, Enora Robin and Aidan While.
Alors que le commerce a toujours « fait » la ville, il contribue également à la « défaire », à l'étaler et à la zoner. Cet ouvrage étudie le jeu des acteurs producteurs d'espaces commerciaux (distributeurs, promoteurs, développeurs) au regard des transformations récentes des politiques d'urbanisme commercial. Il questionne les conditions et les actions susceptibles de conduire à une meilleure intégration de l'activité commerciale dans les politiques urbaines. Les nombreuses études de cas, aussi bien en France qu'à l'étranger (États-Unis, Italie, Grande-Bretagne, Belgique, Tunisie, Algérie, Togo) sont placées au croisement des stratégies économiques d'implantation, de conception des centres commerciaux et de l'aménagement du territoire.
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Alors que le commerce a toujours « fait » la ville, il contribue également à la « défaire », à l'étaler et à la zoner. Cet ouvrage étudie le jeu des acteurs producteurs d'espaces commerciaux (distributeurs, promoteurs, développeurs) au regard des transformations récentes des politiques d'urbanisme commercial. Il questionne les conditions et les actions susceptibles de conduire à une meilleure intégration de l'activité commerciale dans les politiques urbaines. Les nombreuses études de cas, aussi bien en France qu'à l'étranger (États-Unis, Italie, Grande-Bretagne, Belgique, Tunisie, Algérie, Togo) sont placées au croisement des stratégies économiques d'implantation, de conception des centres commerciaux et de l'aménagement du territoire.
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Alors que le commerce a toujours « fait » la ville, il contribue également à la « défaire », à l'étaler et à la zoner. Cet ouvrage étudie le jeu des acteurs producteurs d'espaces commerciaux (distributeurs, promoteurs, développeurs) au regard des transformations récentes des politiques d'urbanisme commercial. Il questionne les conditions et les actions susceptibles de conduire à une meilleure intégration de l'activité commerciale dans les politiques urbaines. Les nombreuses études de cas, aussi bien en France qu'à l'étranger (États-Unis, Italie, Grande-Bretagne, Belgique, Tunisie, Algérie, Togo) sont placées au croisement des stratégies économiques d'implantation, de conception des centres commerciaux et de l'aménagement du territoire.
BASE
Alors que le commerce a toujours « fait » la ville, il contribue également à la « défaire », à l'étaler et à la zoner. Cet ouvrage étudie le jeu des acteurs producteurs d'espaces commerciaux (distributeurs, promoteurs, développeurs) au regard des transformations récentes des politiques d'urbanisme commercial. Il questionne les conditions et les actions susceptibles de conduire à une meilleure intégration de l'activité commerciale dans les politiques urbaines. Les nombreuses études de cas, aussi bien en France qu'à l'étranger (États-Unis, Italie, Grande-Bretagne, Belgique, Tunisie, Algérie, Togo) sont placées au croisement des stratégies économiques d'implantation, de conception des centres commerciaux et de l'aménagement du territoire.
BASE
Alors que le commerce a toujours « fait » la ville, il contribue également à la « défaire », à l'étaler et à la zoner. Cet ouvrage étudie le jeu des acteurs producteurs d'espaces commerciaux (distributeurs, promoteurs, développeurs) au regard des transformations récentes des politiques d'urbanisme commercial. Il questionne les conditions et les actions susceptibles de conduire à une meilleure intégration de l'activité commerciale dans les politiques urbaines. Les nombreuses études de cas, aussi bien en France qu'à l'étranger (États-Unis, Italie, Grande-Bretagne, Belgique, Tunisie, Algérie, Togo) sont placées au croisement des stratégies économiques d'implantation, de conception des centres commerciaux et de l'aménagement du territoire.
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In: Politics, history, and culture
The restless urban landscape : the evolving spatial geography of Johannesburg -- The flawed promise of the high-modernist city : city building at the apex of apartheid rule -- Hollowing out the center : Johannesburg turned inside out -- Worlds apart : the Johannesburg inner city and the making of the outcast ghetto -- The splintering metropolis : laissez-faire urbanism and unfettered suburban sprawl -- Defensive urbanism after apartheid : spatial partitioning and the new fortification aesthetic -- Entrepreneurial urbanism and the private city -- Reconciling arcadia and utopia : gated residential estates at the metropolitan edge -- Epilogue. putting Johannesburg in its place : the ordinary city
World Affairs Online
In: Routledge studies in urbanism and the city
Fast cities in the urban age / Ayona Datta -- Frictionless utopias for the contemporary urban age : large-scale, master-planned redevelopment projects in urbanizing Africa / Martin Murray -- New African city plans : local urban form and the acceleration of urban inequalities / Vanessa Watson -- Speed kills : fast urbanism and endangered sustainability in the Masdar City project / Federico Cugurullo -- Envisioned by the state : entrepreneurial urbanism and the making of Songdo City, South Korea / Hyun Shin -- From petro-urbanism to knowledge megaprojects in the Persian Gulf : Qatar Foundation's Education City / Agatino Rizzo -- "Their houses on our land" : perforations and blockades in the planning of New Town Rajarhat, India / Ratoola Kundu -- Mega-suburbanization in Jakarta mega-urban region / Delik Hudalah and Tommy Firman -- Mega-scale sustainability : the relational production of a new Lusaka / Mathew Lane -- Planning new towns in the People's Republic : Political dimensions of eco-city images in China / Braulio Morera -- Slow : towards a decelerated urbanism / Abdul Shaban and Ayona Datta
In: International journal of urban and regional research, Band 44, Heft 2, S. 266-288
ISSN: 1468-2427
AbstractExisting literature on China's neoliberal urbanism is preoccupied with its institutional incentives and political‐economy dynamics, which are characterized by state dominance through sponsorship and supervision of capital‐market operations that drive pro‐growth aspirations and gentrification strategies. Meanwhile, society, confronted with brutal neoliberal production of urban space, is vulnerable to dispossession and displacement. In this article, we draw upon an ethnographic study conducted at the Higher Education Mega Centre (HEMC) of Guangzhou in an attempt to revisit China's neoliberal urbanism beyond the Marxian political‐economy repertoire, and shift the theoretical focus from production to consumption. In an institutionalized neoliberal context, the state–market–society nexus is closely intertwined—a process that manifests itself as the entangling of state and market, the establishment of a market society, the reflexive effects between neoliberalization and Chinese urban entrepreneurialism, and the capital‐centric rule in urban (re)development. In particular, the socioeconomic and sociospatial contradictions in the HEMC case indicate aggressive and insatiable production of urban space, which has been led by the entrepreneurial local state, but is bounded by the market‐oriented and capital‐centric rules of institutionalized neoliberalization. The article concludes by calling for pragmatic reflection on the 'hard' neoliberal urbanism of the global South.
In: Miguel Kanai , J & Kutz , W 2013 , ' Entrepreneurial assemblages from off the map: (trans) national designs for Tangier ' Environment & Planning D: Society & Space , vol 31 , no. 1 , pp. 80-98 . DOI:10.1068/d20311
Poststructuralist perspectives need to be reconciled with political economic readings of urban globalization. One approach complements the other: the enactment of distantiated circuits and the territorialization of flows occur within existing geographies of uneven development while contingently reproducing or reshaping such spatial conditions of possibility. We argue that broadening the realm of critical urbanism is particularly relevant for researching peripheral entrepreneurialisms and their inherent (im) mobilities, conspicuous ambition paired with unavoidable constraints. This paper focuses on Tanger City Center, a landmark redevelopment controversial for its exclusionary designs and troubled inception. Adopting mobile methods with relational perspectives, we retrace the translocal negotiation of this symptomatic assemblage. However, we show that its territorialization cannot be understood apart from the statesponsored remaking of Tangier into an expansive yet also unequal and fragmented city-region. Furthermore, underneath globalist discourse, the assemblage evinces circumscribed (trans)national agency at the planning stage, while subsequent frictions and disruptions punctuate the construction rhythm. Alongside its theoretical thrust, the paper contributes to: (a) the advancement of explicitly urban interpretations of globalization of the Middle East and North Africa, particularly Morocco's emerging neoliberal geographies under King Mohammed VI; and (b) the diversification of narratives of globalization-led urban change by theorizing entrepreneurial predicaments from offthe map of global city imaginations.
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In: New media & society: an international and interdisciplinary forum for the examination of the social dynamics of media and information change, Band 22, Heft 10, S. 1808-1826
ISSN: 1461-7315
This article argues that Airbnb should be understood as a new urban institution that is transforming relations between market, state, and civil society actors. Taking the Airbnb Citizen advocacy initiative as my case, I examine how this transnational "home sharing" platform achieves such transformations, which in turn requires an investigation into the specific nature of Airbnb as an institutional form. Assuming the agenda-setting role of the urban "regulatory entrepreneur," Airbnb aims to co-shape the terms of current and future policy debates pertaining not just to home sharing/short-term rental but also to the very fabric of city life. It pursues this mode of "platform urbanism" by mobilizing its user base, which it frames as a community of entrepreneurial middle-class citizens looking to supplement their income in a climate of economic insecurity and tech-enabled opportunity. Yet, who is the "Airbnb Citizen" and what are the opportunities and risks associated with platform-mediated citizenship?
Under influence of globalization regional boundaries seem to be melted with the hands of migrants and pave the integration process. Ideally integration occur through voluntary linking in the economic and political domains of two or more formerly independent states to the extent that authority over key areas of national policy is shifted towards the supra-national level. The Pearl River Delta (PRD) region of South China is unique as its status transformed from an international boundary between the UK and the People's Republic of China (PRC) to an internal boundary inside China under 'one country-two systems' in 1997. Cross-border migration between Hong Kong and the PRD can be seen as the discourse of dependant development. Contrary to the contribution of migrants through spontaneously locating and relocating themselves across border with their social and entrepreneurial interplay in history, governments responded selectively to cross-border issues While most research emphasize economic and political aspects, analysis into the migration history reveals that integration in the PRD region is a unique form of 'inter-dependent urbanism' through the hands of temporary and permanent migrants who once happened to be separated by force, are merging in the same nation-state recently. This subtly perceived trend of urbanization has scope to achieve sustainability of the region.
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