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*Call for papers for the workshop ‘The New Urban Ruins: Vacancy and the
post-crisis city’ (Trinity College Dublin, March 1-3 2017)*

The workshop proposes to explore how contestations over the reuse of vacant
spaces can be used to think about cities and urbanisation in new ways.
While spaces of ruination and abandonment have long held a fascination for
us, in recent years there has been an extraordinary resurgence of interest
in the subject in academic and popular discourse (DeSilvey and Edensor
2013).  Scholarly interest has ranged from a focus in ‘shirking cities’ in
Europe (Gribat and Huxley, 2015), the increasing visibility of, and
contestations over, ‘rustbelt’ cities in the US (Safransky, 2014), to the
potentialities of ‘reusing’ vacant spaces for alternative purposes (Bishop
and Williams, 2012). One vector of this recent interest in urban vacancy
has been in the vast swathes of ‘new ruins’ (Kitchin et al, 2014) deposited
across many countries in the wake of the 2008 global financial crisis.  The
effects of the crisis in terms of stalled, unfinished and vacant
developments, stagnant property markets, and iconic ‘new ruins’ has at once
made vacancy a more visible and politically significant feature of many
cities (O’Callaghan et al, 2014). Vacant or unfinished developments have
been implicated in the processes of financial and real-estate speculation
that drove the global economy into meltdown and in popular narratives about
the crisis in countries including Spain and Ireland (Kitchin et al, 2014;
Royo, 2009). In response, a range of different actors have attempted to lay
claim to ‘new ruins’, and by extension vacant spaces more generally, both
in terms of temporary and more ‘permanent’ interventions (Bresnihan and
Byrne, 2015; Di Feliciantonio, 2016; Ferreri 2015; O’Callaghan and Lawton,
2016). This has included policy actors, financial and real-estate
interests, cultural and grassroots organizations, political activists, and
academics.

Considered in this way, vacant space will play a key role in determining
how cities of the future respond to the both urban problems and wider
global challenges. Policy responses have variously promoted the recycling
of vacant spaces back into the orbit of property development and financial
speculation, or their reuse to create the spatial conditions for
alternative types of cities to emerge.

This workshop aims to build a network of scholars interested in the topic
of urban vacancy, to develop conceptual and methodological approaches, and
to engage with policy-makers, civil society groups, and activists in
different contexts.  As such, the aims are conceptual (develop new
theoretical approaches on urban vacancy), empirical (discover new insights
from case-studies in different cities/contexts) and applied (enable new
conversations between activists and policy makers in different contexts).
The workshop will be an output of the IRC New Horizons research project
‘The new urban ruins: vacancy and the post-crisis city’, led by Cian
O'Callaghan (Trinity College Dublin).  The project focuses primarily on
Dublin, with smaller comparative case-studies in Berlin and Barcelona.

We are looking for papers that explicitly or implicitly use urban vacancy
as a theoretical lens or empirical site to examine contemporary urban
issues, broadly considered.  We also particularly welcome contributions on
non-Western or global South cities. We invite contributions focusing on,
but not limited to:



·      The politics of housing activism and/or new social movements around
squatting/reclaiming vacant space.

·      Studies of ‘temporary use’ projects and their relationship with
wider processes of urban change.

·      Critical approaches to studying urban ruins.

·      Studies that focus on the social geographies of urban abandonment.

*The organisers plan to publish the workshop papers as a special issue of a
journal in geography/urban studies*. For this purpose, selected
participants will be invited to send a preliminary draft of their papers
before the workshop.



*Please submit an* *abstract of 250 words* to Cian O’Callaghan (
[log in to unmask]) and Cesare Di Feliciantonio ([log in to unmask]) *by 21
November 2016*. Decisions over acceptance will be communicated by 02
December 2016. A limited number of bursaries to partially cover travel and
accommodation expenses may be available.



*References*

Bishop, P., & Williams, L. (2012). *The temporary city*. London: Routledge.



DeSilvey, C., & Edensor, T. (2013). Reckoning with ruins. *Progress in
Human Geography*, *37*(4), 465-485.



Di Feliciantonio, C. (2016). Social Movements and Alternative Housing
Models: Practicing the “Politics of Possibilities” in Spain. *Housing,
Theory and Society*, 1-19.



Ferreri, M. (2015). The seductions of temporary urbanism. *ephemera*, *15*(1),
181.



Gribat, N., & Huxley, M. (2015). Problem Spaces, Problem Subjects:
Contesting Policies in a Shrinking City. *Planning and Conflict: Critical
Perspectives on Contentious Urban Developments*, 164.



Kitchin, R., O'Callaghan, C., & Gleeson, J. (2014). The New Ruins of
Ireland? Unfinished Estates in the Post‐Celtic Tiger Era. *International
Journal of Urban and Regional Research*, *38*(3), 1069-1080.



O'Callaghan, C., Boyle, M., & Kitchin, R. (2014). Post-politics, crisis,
and Ireland's ‘ghost estates’. *Political Geography*, *42*, 121-133.



O’Callaghan, C., & Lawton, P. (2016). Temporary solutions? Vacant space
policy and strategies for re-use in Dublin. *Irish Geography*, *48*(1),
69-87.



Royo, S. (2009). After the fiesta: the Spanish economy meets the global
financial crisis. South European Society and Politics, 14(1), 19-34.



Safransky, S. (2014). Greening the urban frontier: Race, property, and
resettlement in Detroit. *Geoforum*, *56*, 237-248.

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