As the 21st Century world assumes an increasingly urban landscape, the question of how definitive urban spaces are to be governed intensifies. At the heart of this debate lies a question about the degree and type of autonomy that towns and cities might have in shaping their economic, environmental, social and cultural geography. This paper aims to examine this question. Starting with the premise that the degree of autonomy any particular town or city has is inherently an empirical question – one which can only be conceptualised in relational terms vis-à-vis the distributed, networked and territorialised responsibilities and powers of the city and the nation-state and other zones of connection – we examine four different contexts where debat...
The notion of autonomy has become central for considering the articulation between democracy, public...
For many, shifting economic and social contexts have created the conditions for a radical reappraisa...
The collective empowerment imagined in the government rhetoric of localism bears little resemblance ...
As the 21st Century world assumes an increasingly urban landscape, the question of how definitive ur...
The question of whether giving cities more autonomy can result in better urban governance was a majo...
The late twentieth and early twenty-first century saw a rapid expansion of city populations. Concurr...
It has been extensively argued by theorists of liberal globalization as well as by radical theorists...
Although the end of 2019 will be remembered by many as a time of failure, the last few years have al...
ABSTRACT Urban development is seen in this paper as the process of achieving more social justice in ...
Recent political and economic crises have increased the awareness of the need, challenges and opport...
xiii, 312 leaves :ill. ; 30 cm. Includes bibliographical references. "July 2007". University of Otag...
Long established planning practices are hard to overcome. Top down control mechanisms remain in plac...
In the post-Marxist debate, commons have emerged as a means to develop an autonomous path of emancip...
This is the accepted version of the following article: Barnett, C. (2014), What Do Cities Have to Do...
We outline the rationale for re-opening the issue of the spatiality of the ‘urban’ in urban politics...
The notion of autonomy has become central for considering the articulation between democracy, public...
For many, shifting economic and social contexts have created the conditions for a radical reappraisa...
The collective empowerment imagined in the government rhetoric of localism bears little resemblance ...
As the 21st Century world assumes an increasingly urban landscape, the question of how definitive ur...
The question of whether giving cities more autonomy can result in better urban governance was a majo...
The late twentieth and early twenty-first century saw a rapid expansion of city populations. Concurr...
It has been extensively argued by theorists of liberal globalization as well as by radical theorists...
Although the end of 2019 will be remembered by many as a time of failure, the last few years have al...
ABSTRACT Urban development is seen in this paper as the process of achieving more social justice in ...
Recent political and economic crises have increased the awareness of the need, challenges and opport...
xiii, 312 leaves :ill. ; 30 cm. Includes bibliographical references. "July 2007". University of Otag...
Long established planning practices are hard to overcome. Top down control mechanisms remain in plac...
In the post-Marxist debate, commons have emerged as a means to develop an autonomous path of emancip...
This is the accepted version of the following article: Barnett, C. (2014), What Do Cities Have to Do...
We outline the rationale for re-opening the issue of the spatiality of the ‘urban’ in urban politics...
The notion of autonomy has become central for considering the articulation between democracy, public...
For many, shifting economic and social contexts have created the conditions for a radical reappraisa...
The collective empowerment imagined in the government rhetoric of localism bears little resemblance ...