The increasingly discussed phenomenon of ‘remunicipalisation’ marks a global trend since 2000 for cities to take formerly privatised assets, infrastructure and services back into public ownership. It is most prominent in basic service sectors such as water and energy, but it is also evident in a range of diverse utility and infrastructure areas—from education, health, refuse and other areas of local government. As a reaction to the problems and contradictions arising from four decades of privatisation and marketisation of public services, remunicipalisation represents a compelling contemporary phenomenon of urban politics and governance. In this article, we critically interrogate remunicipalisation in the face of ongoing and mutating proces...
This chapter considers whether remunicipalisation – the return of water services to public ownership...
There is a growing interest in the progressive potential of remunicipalisation, a global trend for t...
WATERLAT-GOBACIT Working Papers (ISSN 2056-4864 - online) Vol. 4 No 2, pp. 27-40. (www.waterlat.org)...
The increasingly discussed phenomenon of ‘remunicipalisation’ marks a global trend since 2000 for ci...
After two decades of widespread privatization, German municipalities have started to re-purchase pri...
This article explores the constraints and contingencies of contemporary urban governance, with refer...
This paper explores and examines the distribution of environmental conflicts in Germany between 1985...
Picking up on the manifestation of state intervention following the 2008 financial crisis, we argue ...
Since the turn of the century, a global trend of re-municipalization has emerged, with cities revers...
The term “remunicipalization” has become associated with a global trend to reverse the privatization...
After a wave of privatizations in the end of the 1990s, the electrical power supply of many municipa...
The reasons for remunicipalisation stem in no small part from the failures of water privatisation. T...
This article explores recent developments in the field of remunicipalisation in the German electrici...
Originally published as: S. Becker, M. Naumann & T. Moss (2017) Between coproduction and commons: u...
This article makes an important contribution to the depoliticisation literature by switching the foc...
This chapter considers whether remunicipalisation – the return of water services to public ownership...
There is a growing interest in the progressive potential of remunicipalisation, a global trend for t...
WATERLAT-GOBACIT Working Papers (ISSN 2056-4864 - online) Vol. 4 No 2, pp. 27-40. (www.waterlat.org)...
The increasingly discussed phenomenon of ‘remunicipalisation’ marks a global trend since 2000 for ci...
After two decades of widespread privatization, German municipalities have started to re-purchase pri...
This article explores the constraints and contingencies of contemporary urban governance, with refer...
This paper explores and examines the distribution of environmental conflicts in Germany between 1985...
Picking up on the manifestation of state intervention following the 2008 financial crisis, we argue ...
Since the turn of the century, a global trend of re-municipalization has emerged, with cities revers...
The term “remunicipalization” has become associated with a global trend to reverse the privatization...
After a wave of privatizations in the end of the 1990s, the electrical power supply of many municipa...
The reasons for remunicipalisation stem in no small part from the failures of water privatisation. T...
This article explores recent developments in the field of remunicipalisation in the German electrici...
Originally published as: S. Becker, M. Naumann & T. Moss (2017) Between coproduction and commons: u...
This article makes an important contribution to the depoliticisation literature by switching the foc...
This chapter considers whether remunicipalisation – the return of water services to public ownership...
There is a growing interest in the progressive potential of remunicipalisation, a global trend for t...
WATERLAT-GOBACIT Working Papers (ISSN 2056-4864 - online) Vol. 4 No 2, pp. 27-40. (www.waterlat.org)...