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- with the usual apologies for cross-posting
2013
SASE Conference, Milan, Italy

 

CALL
FOR PAPERS for the mini-conference:

Cities
in crisis: The urban political economy of the global recession

 

Organizers:

Manuel Aalbers,
University of Leuven, Belgium, [log in to unmask]

Ugo Rossi,
University of Turin, Italy, [log in to unmask]

 

The credit crunch of 2007-08 emanating
from the subprime mortgage crisis in US cities and the subsequent global
recession have demonstrated how urban economies are at the heart of the
functioning and the contradictions of contemporary capitalism in a context of
hegemonic yet inherently variegated neoliberalism. Almost half a decade into
the global economic crisis, social scientists concerned with urban issues look
at the crisis as a structural condition with which contemporary cities and
regions have to deal rather than merely an episodic conjuncture.

 

At the city level, the crisis has an
ambivalent function. On the one hand, it acts as a disciplining force, accelerating
the evolutionary process within local economies as well as rationalizing the
ways in which cities are being governed. On the other hand, the crisis reinvigorates
the capitalist rationality intrinsic to the urban process, by pushing
politico-economic elites to valorize cities as spaces of economic
experimentation through a variety of governance and accumulation strategies. Cities
are therefore both epicentres and
victims of the global crisis as well as places that appear to have the
potential to offer solutions to the structural problems affecting capitalist
economies. We suggest that these processes are best studied from a renewed political
economy perspective on urban re/development and governance. Yet, the urban political
economy lens not only offers a perspective from which to study cities, it also
offers a rich empirical context from which to study contemporary capitalism.

 

This mini-conference looks for
contributions addressing the following thematic strands:

-         
Cities
and late neoliberalism: we understand ‘late neoliberalism’ as a form of
neoliberalism permeated by a multidimensional condition of crisis: crises of
legitimation (discursive-moral), accumulation (economic-capitalist), governance
(political-administrative). How is coping with these multiple crises reshaping
the urban experience across the globe? How does this help us rethink the way in
which neoliberalism is commonly understood?

-         
Cities
and the austerity-growth dialectic: in times of crisis, municipal governments
are requested to implement austerity measures, but are also expected to devise
strategies of economic regeneration. How do urban politico-economic elites deal
with this antinomy? What are the adaptation mechanisms, governance structures
and institutional capacities being deployed in this context?

-         
Cities
and financialization: the financialization of home, infrastructure and urban
re/development more widely speaking were distinctive features of the
expansionary era of neoliberalism. Foreclosures, repossessions and ghost
residential spaces as well as overleveraged local governments have then
characterized the landscapes of cities after the credit crunch. How are local
governments, urban residents and the housing sector responding to the disastrous
failures of financialization? 

-         
Cities
and alternative models: cities can be spaces of despair, but also spaces of
hope in which grassroots experiments may mature and eventually transcend the
local context. If it is true that challenges to hegemonic models rise from
alternative models at the local scale, what role can and do specific cities and
communities play in such alternative models? How do city residents and local
governments try to work outside the box of late neoliberalism?


Please visit the SASE website for practical instructions: https://sase.org/2013---milan/mini-conferences_fr_158.html
Deadline for submissions is January 14.