Securing Urbanism: Contagion, Power and Risk
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.