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*** Apologies for cross-postings ***

 

The call below may be of interest to list members.

 

Best wishes,

David

 

 

Title: Exploring World Cities under Conditions of Financialized
Globalization

 

Organizers: David Bassens (Vrije Universiteit Brussel) & Michiel van
Meeteren (Ghent University)

 

Abstract: World and global cities have since long been key concepts for
economic geographers to understand the role of an archipelago of networked
cities as centers of capitalist ‘command and control’ over the global
economy. Although this perspective remains a crucial entry-point to
understand the power configurations that produce deepening uneven
development, the exact modes of command and control have been morphed and
our conceptualization of world/global cities may need to be augmented as a
consequence. For one, the financialization of economies and societies has
implied the growing relevance of financial markets and finance capital (and
its logic) in global accumulation strategies, as more ‘traditional’
globalization strategies that combine capital with cheap labor appear
insufficient to maintain ‘acceptable’ or ‘sustainable’ profit rates. Under
these conditions of overaccumulation, it has been hypothesized that the
world city archipelago remains an obligatory passage point for the
relatively assured realization of capital. More strongly, a complex of
advanced producer services (APS), centered on, but certainly not limited to
a number of global investment banks and law firms, is now able to
appropriate superprofits as producers of co-constitutive monopolistic
knowledge on operational and financial firm restructuring, the creation of
new circuits of value, and capital switching. 

 

In this session, we intend to corroborate such an augmented world city
hypothesis, by gathering empirical, conceptual, and theoretical
contributions that – amongst others – explore the following dimensions:

*       The spatiality of the world city archipelago:  How does the world
city archipelago “work” throughout the various moments of the accumulation
process? How does it insert finance capital (logics) in contemporary
economies and societies? What are the empirical and conceptual relations,
therefore, with international and offshore financial centers?

*       Power relations: What is the nature of the power relations within
the APS complex and between APS and their corporate, institutional, and
sovereign clients? How does structured coherence emerge in nodes undergoing
world-city formation? Can we observe new forms of core-periphery formation?

*       Knowledge flows: How does salient knowledge flow through the APS
complex and its changing choreography of project ecologies? How is knowledge
monopolized, packaged, and resold? What are the effects on the operations
and performance of clients? How is professional expertise constructed and
how does it diverge from ‘actual’ knowledge?

*       Methodology and visualization: Which data sources and methods allow
for a critical cartography of contemporary global accumulation strategies
and the role APS play therein? What is the potential for mixed-method
frameworks in this matter, for instance when drawing on existing models that
map and measure the world city network to set up qualitative research
designs?

 

If this session carries away your interest, please send an abstract of
approx. 250 words to  <mailto:[log in to unmask]>
[log in to unmask] and  <mailto:[log in to unmask]>
[log in to unmask] by 1 April 2015.

 

Literature:

*       Allen, J. (2010) Powerful city networks: More than connections, less
than domination and control. Urban Studies, 47(13), pp. 2895–2911.

*       Bassens, D., van Meeteren, M. (2014) World cities under conditions
of financialized globalization: Towards an augmented world city hypothesis.
Progress in Human Geography, online first, doi:10.1177/0309132514558441.

*       Coe, N.M., Lai, K., Wójcik, D. (2014) Integrating finance into
global production networks. Regional Studies, 48(5), pp. 761-777.

*       Harvey D (2010) The Enigma of Capital and the Crises of Capitalism.
London: Profile Books.

*       Taylor, P.J. (2000) World cities and territorial states under
conditions of contemporary globalization. Political Geography, 19(1), pp.
5–32

*       Wójcik, D. (2013) Where governance fails: Advanced business services
and the offshore world. Progress in Human Geography, 37(3), pp. 330–347.

Assistant Professor @ Cosmopolis Centre for Urban Research

Department of Geography
Vrije Universiteit Brussel
Building F - Room 6F326
Pleinlaan 2, B-1050 Brussels
Belgium

 

t: +32 (0)2 629 33 87

e:  <mailto:[log in to unmask]> [log in to unmask]

w:  <http://www.cosmopolis.be/people/david-bassens>
http://www.cosmopolis.be/people/david-bassens 



 


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