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Dear all,



A friendly reminder to submit your abstracts for an international symposium
on smart-city regional governance, to be held in Brussels on 8-9 October.
Deadline for abstracts is 29 May!



Best,


Bas




Brussels Centre for Urban Studies

Vrije Universiteit Brussel



International Symposium:  8-9 October 2015



*Smart City-Regional Governance: ‘Smartness’ in Reconciling
Internationality, Competitiveness and Cohesion?*





Call for Papers:



*Background: *

This symposium sets out to explore the meaning and practice of ‘smartness’
in city-regional governance as it seeks to balance the competing quests for
urban international competitiveness, national economic development and
societal cohesion. The symposium also marks the decennial of
‘Regionalisation Symposia’ regularly organised since 2005 by the Centre for
Urban and Regional Governance (University of Westminster) and the
International City-Regional Policy Network (ICRPol.Net).



Globalisation has continuously increased the pressure on states, regions
and localities to compete for presumed footloose capital in a bid to secure
economic ‘growth’ as predominant indicator of ‘success’. This has
increasingly resulted in a focus on cities and city-regions as identified
‘motors’ of regional and national economic development, questioning the
role of large-scale state policies. Such questions have become more
pertinent under the impact of now eight years of fiscal austerity, with
state capacity to intervene in market-driven competitiveness increasingly
limited. The result has been a growing foray by cities into the
international sphere as a way of opening up new prospects and opportunities
beyond the confines of the respective state as their traditional
political-economic context.



One key narrative in particular that has been mobilised in the last decade
has been that cities are ‘smart cities’. Smart cities are understood as
entrepreneurial cities that respond immediately and efficiently to changes
in global markets, as wired cities in which urban technologies contribute
to better urban governance and management of infrastructures, or as cities
in which entrepreneurial discoveries and collective experimentations lead
to strategic specialisation. Such new, more experimental and enterprising
policy making may be viewed as an expression of ‘smartness’ in urban
governance, i.e. as a ‘new’ way of doing things, especially also when
dealing with conflicting agendas and aspirations. Yet, the meanings of, and
pre-conditions for, adopting and implementing ‘smartness’ vary considerably
between places, influencing the propensity for its discursive and practical
manifestations. A differing concentration or ‘density’ of ‘smartness’ sets
apart cities from other, less politically capable, entrepreneurial or
locationally attractive cities, but also from non-urban regions – be they
part of a wider city-region, or located beyond. ‘Smartness’ may thus be
understood in a broader sense than its conventional association with ‘smart
growth’.



Such change has not only included the ‘obvious candidates’ – the global
cities like London or New York, but also other, less often quoted cities.
Whether ‘second tier’ cities, regional capitals or more peripheral urban
places, cities are trying to raise their profiles and be recognised as
places that ‘matter’. Be it through trans-border collaborations, joining
city networks for specific policy agendas, or being granted a special
status, even if merely temporary (e.g. ‘European Capital of Culture’),
urban-centric competitiveness increasingly differentiates between such
places and the less visible ‘rest’.



This raises questions about the nature of state territories as presumed
homogenous entities in political and administrative terms, as well as
access to democratic representation and policy legitimation. If some
localities or regions are seemingly gaining more voice than others, such
egality may no longer be provided. So, the question this symposium tries to
explore concerns the scope for ‘smart’ cities and city regions to ‘go it
alone’ in terms of seeking improved economic competitiveness, yet also – at
the same time - respond to the demand for remaining part of a wider
political and societal entity – the region or state.



How can ‘smartness’ in politics and policy-making help square that circle
of a seeming conflict, even contradiction, between the quest for
competitiveness – also at the behest of the region and state –
international engagement, and the expectation of maintaining solidarity
with, and responsibility for, the same larger entities. In other words, is
urban competitiveness part of, or an alternative to, the idea of a cohesive
society and state territory, where unevenness in developmental prospects is
the new accepted ‘reality’? And can ‘smartness’ in governance ‘square the
circle’ of seemingly conflicting interests and agendas?



*Topics*:



Keynotes will offer conceptual ‘signposts’ for discussions at the
symposium. Prof Andrew Jonas (University of Hull) has confirmed his
participation in this ‘signposting’.



Papers are invited that address questions around *inter alia:*

-       collaborative governance in city regions (within and between
city-regions, within and across regions and states)

-       cross-border city-regionalism (within and outside the EU)

-       urban competitiveness, economic policies

-       ‘smartness’ as a discourse/principle in policy making (e.g. role of
sustainability in economic policy, paradigm shifts, ‘transition’ concept in
governance discourses and practices)

-       cities and para-diplomacy (international engagement by sub-national
actors)

-       urban competitiveness and democratic participation (in/exclusion),

-       city-regionalism and peripheralisation/marginalisation of areas and
actors

-       city-regional governance and state structure (powers,
responsibilities, political culture of urban regionalism)



Please send abstracts of around 300 words as expressions of interests to:

Tassilo Herrschel ([log in to unmask]) and Bas van Heur

([log in to unmask])



*Deadline for Abstracts: Friday, 29 May 2015.*



*Bursaries:*

A few bursaries of €200 each for PhD students are available on a
competitive basis. To apply for one of these, please send an extended
abstract of around 800 words by the stated deadline.



Thank you very much.



Tassilo Herrschel and Bas van Heur