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Lectures + article summary Urban policies and Planning

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Summary of 105 pages for the course Urban Policies And Planning at UU (-)

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November 29, 2021
Number of pages
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Written in
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College 1 - 3 september

What are urban problems?

- Two schools of thought:

- Outcomes of characteristics of specific places: this, urban policy remedied
local deficiencies

- What are defined as problems are actually symptoms, not causes of urban
problems

- Urban policy may need to function at various scales

What is urban policy?

- A fuzzy notion

- Characterised by deliberative or purpose intervention by agents in different aspects
of the functioning of cities (Edwards & Imrie, p. 43)

- Responds to social, economic, ecological and political problems in situ

- May have potentially large consequences

Urban policy, defined:

- It is about the welfare of local residents in urban society, influencing geographic
distribution of social / economic activities

- Any policy relevant for cities (Glaeser; Thomas)

- Something that is hard to pin down (Cochrane)

- An exercise of policing powers of the state; not value neutral (Dikec)

- A state activity that affects the use of space and the built environment (Fainstein &
Fainstein)

- It is just about urban places (Imbroscio)

A moral object & politics

- Urban policy as a moral imperative

- What role for the state is envisaged?

,Urban politics

- Urban policy linked to urban politics:

- The contestation between different social groups about the meaning and
materiality of urban life; policy is a political object of government

- Pluralist theories:

- Policy is an outcome of competing interest groups
- While people know their interests, they are able to effectively pursue these
interests (Dahl)

- Critique:

- Not all opinions are included, issues of power



Urban policy & power

- Role of power in urban policy and politics;

- Urban policy is part of a contested political process favouring some groups
over others

- Neo-Marxism;

- Urban policy part of state activity creating conditions conducive to capital
investment / accumulation

- Collective consumption;

- Urban policy as a response to welfare needs of citizens

The urban growth machines & reigns

- Urban growth machine:

- Urban political processes revolve around economic development, especially
around property development

- Logan / Molotch;

- Policy is part of the exercise of elite power around economic growth
objectives; a growth coalition of developers & politicians tries to secure
growth

, - Urban regime theory (stone)

- Power is fragmented, regimes arise between local governments &
private actors enabling policy implementation



Place-based or people based

- Many examples of urban policy that are place-based

- Intervenes in problems with a specific place

- Assumes that local problems result from the social & economic problems of that
place

- People-based

- Focus on social exclusion, through individuals, vulnerable groups and
deprived neighbourhoods

Policy coordination

- An enduring theme of urban policy

- Not one single government agency is responsible for the problems of cities

- Urban policy is not a discrete area, making it difficult to decipher

- Given our urban society, boundaries between urban and other policies is blurred

The city & disorder

- The unruly city hypothesis; fragmented communities, strangers, etc.

- Where urban policy fits - what is its place in ´solving´ these issues?

Urban policy & disorder

- Management of social disorder: managing spaces and people in the city considered
problematic (ex. Idea of an underclass)

- Critique: the police state nature of such policies (ie. Dikec): is the focus on social
welfare, or policing?

- Public realm policies: premised on enabling safe spaces for consumption

, - Yet, erosion of the public realm through privatisation, creation of exclusive enclaves
etc.

- Who has the right to be in these spaces?

The right to the city

- How to create socially just & democratic cities (Lefebvre) rather than based on
market interests

- Right to the city… the ´demand (for) a transformed and renewed access to urban life
(lefebvre)

- Access to urban space, a right to participate in decisions concerning urban
space
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