This commentary reflects on the influence of the post-political critique on urban studies. In this literature (e.g. Swyngedouw, 2014), the default position of contemporary democracies is post-politics – the truly political is only rare, random and radical. The ‘post-political trap’ refers to the intuitively convincing, yet ultimately confining account it provides of contemporary urban governance. We identify three shortcomings. First, the binary understanding of the real political/politics as police negates the in-betweenness and contingency of actually existing urban politics. By so doing, secondly, political agency is reduced to the heroic and anti-heroic. Thus, the plurality of political agency in the urban sphere and multi-faceted forms...
We outline the rationale for re-opening the issue of the spatiality of the ‘urban’ in urban politics...
This article responds to both ongoing urban practices and strands of urban theory by arguing for a (...
Settlements variously termed ‘ex-urbs’, ‘edge cities’, ‘technoburbs ’ are taken to signal something ...
This commentary reflects on the influence of the post-political critique on urban studies. In this l...
This commentary reflects on the influence of the post-political critique on urban studies. In this l...
Privatization of urban space is increasing, the needs of the global economy push out those of ordina...
What happens to urban politics when examined through the post-political lens? In our response to Der...
In recent years, urban research has become increasingly concerned with the social, political and eco...
Over the past three decades, research in urban politics or increasingly urban governance reveals a l...
The idea of the open city has been used both conceptually and analytically to understand the politic...
Neoliberal practices are the new orthodoxy within urban governance imposing limits to participatory ...
This paper deals with urban political geographies and, most particularly, with political economy per...
This paper critically analyses the post-political thesis, highlighting its universalising and agency...
This paper explores the problematique of the consensus and conflict binary that has emerged in the c...
In democratic societies, the gap between the existing social order and its claim to universal inclus...
We outline the rationale for re-opening the issue of the spatiality of the ‘urban’ in urban politics...
This article responds to both ongoing urban practices and strands of urban theory by arguing for a (...
Settlements variously termed ‘ex-urbs’, ‘edge cities’, ‘technoburbs ’ are taken to signal something ...
This commentary reflects on the influence of the post-political critique on urban studies. In this l...
This commentary reflects on the influence of the post-political critique on urban studies. In this l...
Privatization of urban space is increasing, the needs of the global economy push out those of ordina...
What happens to urban politics when examined through the post-political lens? In our response to Der...
In recent years, urban research has become increasingly concerned with the social, political and eco...
Over the past three decades, research in urban politics or increasingly urban governance reveals a l...
The idea of the open city has been used both conceptually and analytically to understand the politic...
Neoliberal practices are the new orthodoxy within urban governance imposing limits to participatory ...
This paper deals with urban political geographies and, most particularly, with political economy per...
This paper critically analyses the post-political thesis, highlighting its universalising and agency...
This paper explores the problematique of the consensus and conflict binary that has emerged in the c...
In democratic societies, the gap between the existing social order and its claim to universal inclus...
We outline the rationale for re-opening the issue of the spatiality of the ‘urban’ in urban politics...
This article responds to both ongoing urban practices and strands of urban theory by arguing for a (...
Settlements variously termed ‘ex-urbs’, ‘edge cities’, ‘technoburbs ’ are taken to signal something ...