There is a well established body of feminist scholarship critiquing the methodological and epistemological limits of an “objective” view from nowhere in urban research and political economy frameworks. Recent developments, such as the planetary urbanization thesis, have reignited feminist efforts to counter patriarchal, colonial, and hegemonic ways of knowing. Here, we recount our frustrations with the reproduction of dominant political economic modes of “knowing” urban processes such as gentrification and culture-led regeneration in research that seeks to uncover the production of neoliberal spaces and subjectivities. We argue that this narrow approach forecloses the possibility of observing or working with radical world-making projects th...
This article juxtaposes insights from recent urban policy mobilities scholarship on circulating know...
Cities are now front and centre of many community-led radical urban transition and transformation in...
In recent years some commentators have looked at successive waves of UK urban policy from the perspe...
There is a well established body of feminist scholarship critiquing the methodological and epistemol...
This intervention contributes to feminist and queer responses to Brenner and Schmid’s ‘planetary urb...
Abstract: This paper contributes a critical and intersectional feminist analysis and methodological ...
Debates centred on ‘planetary urbanisation’ have raised questions over the adequacy of existing theo...
This article takes up the challenge of extending and enhancing the literature on arts interventions ...
Debates centred on ‘planetary urbanisation’ have raised questions over the adequacy of existing theo...
In this chapter I address the geographical imaginaries, our taken-for-granted spatial orderings, tha...
This paper explores how innovative ways of mapping both the presence and the agency of contemporary ...
In recent years some commentators have looked at successive waves of UK urban policy from the perspe...
International audienceFeminism and planning : influences and ambiguities. Worlwide emergence and spr...
This paper explores how innovative ways of mapping both the presence and the agency of contemporary ...
Commentary i: key thinkers on citiesreviewed by: heather mclean, university of glasgow, ukit’s an ex...
This article juxtaposes insights from recent urban policy mobilities scholarship on circulating know...
Cities are now front and centre of many community-led radical urban transition and transformation in...
In recent years some commentators have looked at successive waves of UK urban policy from the perspe...
There is a well established body of feminist scholarship critiquing the methodological and epistemol...
This intervention contributes to feminist and queer responses to Brenner and Schmid’s ‘planetary urb...
Abstract: This paper contributes a critical and intersectional feminist analysis and methodological ...
Debates centred on ‘planetary urbanisation’ have raised questions over the adequacy of existing theo...
This article takes up the challenge of extending and enhancing the literature on arts interventions ...
Debates centred on ‘planetary urbanisation’ have raised questions over the adequacy of existing theo...
In this chapter I address the geographical imaginaries, our taken-for-granted spatial orderings, tha...
This paper explores how innovative ways of mapping both the presence and the agency of contemporary ...
In recent years some commentators have looked at successive waves of UK urban policy from the perspe...
International audienceFeminism and planning : influences and ambiguities. Worlwide emergence and spr...
This paper explores how innovative ways of mapping both the presence and the agency of contemporary ...
Commentary i: key thinkers on citiesreviewed by: heather mclean, university of glasgow, ukit’s an ex...
This article juxtaposes insights from recent urban policy mobilities scholarship on circulating know...
Cities are now front and centre of many community-led radical urban transition and transformation in...
In recent years some commentators have looked at successive waves of UK urban policy from the perspe...