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*SOCIALIST** AND POST-SOCIALIST URBANIZATIONS: ARCHITECTURE, LAND AND
PROPERTY RIGHTS*



*Urban and Landscape Days XI May 8-11, 2014Tallinn, Estonia*

Abstract submission deadline: *Dec 2, 2013*
Email for submission: [log in to unmask]
Website: www.artun.ee/uld

CALL FOR PAPERS

Although most European cities both in the 'East' and in the 'West' grew
rapidly in the post-war decades, the important questions regarding the
difference between urbanization under the two conflicting political regimes
has never been deeply analysed and resolved in the urban studies. Thus, the
post-1989 success and current renaissance of the notion of 'post-socialism'
seems surprising. At the same time, however, the number of critical voices
has been growing. Still, can we seriously talk about post-socialism,
lacking not only a fully developed definition and understanding of ‘post-
socialist city’ but also what 'the socialist city' is?

The missing or poor definition of ‘socialism’ is one of the key weaknesses
of the concept of post-socialism. Socialism comes into the question of post-
socialism in different ways: What are the 'socialist' origins of 'post-
socialist' practices? What importance did the imagined return to 'pre-
socialist' capitalism play in building the 'post-socialist' capitalism? Is
negation of socialism (the 'anti-socialism') an important aspect of post-
socialism? Whereas socialism could be seen both as a political idea and as
an actual historical experience, post-socialism appears to be a societal
condition only that is, furthermore, primarily restricted to a region of
former Soviet Union and Eastern Europe.

The existence of different socialisms—such as Soviet, Czechoslovakian,
Yugoslavian, Chinese and Vietnamese— however, problematizes the regional
bias of the term post-socialism. Would it be possible to talk about the
common 'post-socialist' experience facing such different historical and
geographical contexts? Would China be comprehensible as
post-socialistsimilarly as Hungary or Estonia? Does it need
downplaying historical and
cultural particularities of China (but of course other contexts as well)
that unquestionably are present? Would property regimes or ‘urban villages’
in China be comprehensible from the perspective of Eastern Europe?

In this context, we wish to initiate a fresh debate regarding the future of
(the concepts of) socialism and post-socialism through engagements with
different geographical contexts such as Eastern Europe, Asia, South
America, and elsewhere. We would like to engage ‘post-socialism’ with
ongoing debates of comparative urbanism but also seek ways to re-develop
and conceptualise ‘socialism’ and ‘post-socialism’ themselves.

The conference aims to explore histories and geographies of socialism and
post-socialism in relation to three themes: 1) architecture and urban
planning, 2) land use and landscape, and 3) property rights.

*1) ARCHITECTURE AND URBAN PLANNING:* Many seeds of today's architectural
and planning thinking have been planted in the socialist period.
Historically, modernism and socialism developed hand in hand. Yet the roots
of “post-socialist post-modernism”, to take one example, can be traced back
to 1980s, if not earlier. This raises the questions about the relation
between the architectural dissent under socialism and
post-socialistarchitecture mainstream. In some instances, the value of
buildings and
urban plans from socialist period is being rediscovered today. Which
aspects of socialist urban planning and architecture persist and what is to
be learned from (which?) discarded ideas of socialist urban planning?

*2) LAND USE AND LANDSCAPE:* Suburbanization and rediscovery of historic
city centres: these processes are portrayed as almost 'natural' to East
European post-socialist experience. Yet, is it so simple? A similar enquiry
about the socialist roots of these processes could be made. Individual
construction of family houses was allowed, if not encouraged, in many
countries during socialist periods. Similar questions emerge in relation to
historical cores whereby the notion of heritage and the idea of
international image-making clearly existed during the socialist period.
Could we draw parallels between socialism and what happens today? What are
the origins of today's prominence that we assign to urban leisure function,
of the idea that cities should be beautiful and enjoyable, of our sense for
'landscaping' of urban space? Furthermore, looking at landscapes raises
questions of different modes of production and ways of representations.
What are the relations between socialist ideas and landscapes? How post-
socialism manifests itself in various aspects of land use and landscape?

*3) PROPERTY RIGHTS:* The transfer from state ownership to private
ownership (privatizations, special economic zones) is a well-known account
of the post-socialist transformation. However, can we observe
counter-tendencies (social, political, legal) at play: that is, from
private to state, public, or common? Can one note only neo-liberal
privatisation or also alternative forms of collective and public property?
Has state withdrawn from property market or found different roles in
regulating and practising it? Although new generation of activism has
appeared on the horizon, the privatism is challenged predominantly at the
level of use, access and life-style. The value of community and public
spaces is accepted by wide array of actors, but the more controversial
issue of ownership and property rights is often left untouched. Perhaps the
value of ‘private property’ is widely accepted and the critique is not only
difficult to make but also counter-intuitive. We welcome critical empirical
and theoretical engagements that reflect on the different forms of
property—ranging from private to variously organised common, collective and
public ownership—and the notion of post-socialism.

We welcome theoretically informed presentations and case studies from a
variety of fields including urban studies, architecture, landscape studies,
art history, sociology, anthropology, organizational studies and urban
economics. Historically oriented presentations are welcome and authors are
encouraged to highlight historical connections between the past, the
present, and the future: unexpected genealogies, continuities and
rediscoveries of ideas, forms and practices. We welcome oral and poster
presentation of urban and architectural projects, artistic research and
research through design that work with the questions above. We also
encourage other non-standard forms of presentation.

Please send your abstract (300 words) and short bio (60 words) by *Dec 2,
2013 *to [log in to unmask]

The conference is organized by the Faculty of Architecture, Estonian
Academy of Arts. It is the eleventh installment of the now-traditional
Urban and Landscape Days.

Keynote speakers include Lukasz Stanek (Manchester Architecture Research
Centre, University of Manchester) and Stefan Rettich (KARO Architects,
Leipzig).

Please visit www.artun.ee/uld for further information or contact us at
[log in to unmask] should you have any questions.


-- 
Tauri Tuvikene
Doctoral Researcher
Department of Geography, University College London (UCL)
taurituvikene.wordpress.com

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