Review: A Contemporary Critique of Historical Materialism, the Anatomy of Capitalist Societies: The Economy, Civil Society and the State, the Philosopher in the City: The Moral Dimensions of Urban Politics

1983 ◽  
Vol 1 (1) ◽  
pp. 109-117 ◽  
Author(s):  
R A Sayer ◽  
P Cooke ◽  
R Goodin
2009 ◽  
Vol 23 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-22 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nancy Burns ◽  
Laura Evans ◽  
Gerald Gamm ◽  
Corrine McConnaughy

We seek to explain how states govern big cities. Political scientists' accounts of urban politics either fail to treat the state systematically or place state hostility at the center of such an account. Accounts by historians, by contrast, offer tools political scientists can use to theorize urban politics in the state arena. We use those tools, and we find that cities can manage the legislative process. This power starts with bill introduction and carries through to the vote on the floor. This ability results from a central feature of American state politics: on bills about big cities, state legislators now and in the past find their primary voting cues in the unity of local delegations. The city delegation, then, has tremendous power to manage the state's involvement in city affairs. In many respects, ours is an account of a special kind of divided government, with two institutional arenas where urban government is carried out.


2020 ◽  
pp. 1348-1372
Author(s):  
Hüseyin Gül ◽  
İhsan Kamalak ◽  
Hakan Mehmet Kiriş

As a result of comprehensive reforms since the late 1990s, the structures, powers, functions and relations of the central government and local administrations, and of the state, market and civil society have been reshaped in Turkey. Besides, Turkey's democratic and administrative system and the local, metropolitan and regional administrations have been strengthened. This study focuses on the local and urban politics and elections as well as the local administration structure in Turkey. Accordingly, first, this chapter aims to present a conceptual and theoretical background for the paper on local and urban politics. Second, the paper gives a short review of the local administrative system in Turkey. Third, the study focuses on the types and characteristics of the local and urban politics and elections, actors involved, participation patterns, etc. Finally, a short review of the issues discussed in the chapter along with some recommendations is presented.


2017 ◽  
Vol 54 (2) ◽  
pp. 179-196 ◽  
Author(s):  
Madeleine C Pill

Abstract Philanthropic foundations have become increasingly important actors in the governance of cities in decline in the United States. The relationships between foundation and other actors within city governance are illuminated via contrasting interpretations of state-society power relationships which highlight the mutability of ‘civil society’ as an oppositional or integrated part of the state. After detailing a typology of philanthropy of place, the twofold role played by foundations in the governance of neighbourhood revitalization in the cities in which they are embedded is explored: not only as an important source of funding and support for neighbourhood-based organizations, but as contributors to the creation of neighbourhood revitalization policy agendas. Considering the cities of Baltimore and Cleveland reveals that the policy approaches adopted have tended to align with the predominant neoliberal policy agenda rather than revealing foundation actors as activists who assist the organizations they support in exerting agency to contest or seek to transform the prevailing hegemony. This makes clear the need for rigour in defining what constitutes civil society, and points to the importance of embedded philanthropic practices in enabling civil society agency.


Urban Studies ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 56 (13) ◽  
pp. 2616-2634 ◽  
Author(s):  
Cecilia Eseverri Mayer

This comparative study focuses on how civil society structures influence youth from a Muslim background in their upward mobility and local belonging (to the neighbourhood and to the city). Under comparison are one banlieue in Paris and one barrio in Madrid, similar in terms of social precarity and yet different in their degree of ethnic and religious diversity, their connection to the city centre, the state funding they receive and their civic participation. In the case of the neighbourhood of San Cristóbal (Madrid), a lack of state investment has resulted in a diminished capacity for civil society to connect young people to new opportunities. However, their daily contact with the city centre, the ethnic diversity in the neighbourhood and collaborative efforts between secular and religious structures work together to foster a sense of mixed belonging among young Spanish Muslims. In contrast, significant investment by the State in the suburb of Les Bosquets (Paris) since the riots in 2005 have indeed linked young people to new opportunities, but at the cost of an institutionalisation of civil society structures. In Les Bosquets, increased ethnic segregation, geographical isolation, and the estrangement of religious and ‘laic’ (i.e. secular) organisations are all responsible for the new sense of malaise felt by youths, thus severely affecting their sense of belonging.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pierpaolo De Giosa

Chapter 2 traces the evolution of heritage politics in Malaysia since the era when European principles of conservation privileged architectural grandeur and monumental heritage. Since the 1980s Melaka’s institutions have turned the buildings in the old civic area into museums celebrating a glorified past. At the same time, the state has embraced a developmentalist agenda. The World Heritage bid attracted the interest of real estate developers, bringing to the city a number of projects of the type it had never experienced before. In between the visions of an ‘Old Melaka’ and a ‘New Melaka’, the state and civil society have been increasingly involved in a new era of heritage politics following more recent UNESCO-derived shifts towards non-monumental forms of heritage and cultural diversity.


Urban Studies ◽  
2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alejandra María Leal Martínez

Numerous urban scholars have been studying Mexico City—the capital of Mexico—since at least the 1970s, drawn to its remarkable growth during the second half of the 20th century and to its specific patterns of urbanization. The city is located at more than 7,000 feet above sea level in the southern section of a large, enclosed basin known as the Valley of Mexico. Its name officially designates what until recently was the Federal District, an area of 550 square miles divided into sixteen administrative jurisdictions and which, until 1997, lacked a democratically elected government. A 2016 reform transformed Mexico City into the country’s thirty-second state. In common usage, the name Mexico City also refers to the greater Mexico City Metropolitan Area, which as of 2010 also included fifty-nine adjacent municipalities in the State of Mexico and one in the State of Hidalgo, with a total extent of nearly 3,100 square miles. According to the 2010 census, Mexico City’s population is around nine million, while the greater Metropolitan Area has more than twenty million inhabitants. The city was founded in 1521 on the ruins of the Aztec capital on a small island in Lake Texcoco and gradually expanded onto the increasingly desiccated lakebed, which has created a particular set of environmental problems, such as constant flooding. Like other major Latin American cities, Mexico City—and later the Metropolitan Area—grew exponentially after the 1940s, as industrialization attracted massive migration. Its population jumped from three million in 1930 to around fifteen million in 1985. Mexico’s most important city, as well as its political, cultural, and economic center, Mexico City is a study in contrasts. It displays wealth and poverty extremes, world-class architecture next to marginal shantytowns, and a vibrant, cosmopolitan cultural life alongside high criminal rates and seemingly intractable environmental problems, which continue to attract the interest of a wide variety of urban scholars. This bibliography is selective rather than exhaustive. It privileges recent English- and Spanish-language scholarship, but also includes key texts that continue to inform the field, as well as recent urban historiography. It is divided into the main topics covered by urban scholars of Mexico City since the 1970s. These range from urban planning, urban politics, informality, poverty, and marginality, which were dominant themes until the 1980s, to urban protest and social movements, gentrification, and environmental, gender, and cultural studies, which have expanded the field more recently. The author wishes to thank Carlos Humberto Arroyo Batista for his research assistance in elaborating this bibliography.


1982 ◽  
Vol 76 (1) ◽  
pp. 118
Author(s):  
Peter J. Steinberger ◽  
Hadley Arkes

Urban Studies ◽  
2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joseph Ben Prestel

Much like the vibrant city on the Nile itself, scholarship on Cairo has seen many changes in recent years. The continued growth of the Egyptian capital, the transformation of its cityscape, as well as the political transitions of the last decade have contributed to shifting depictions of the city. Between the Egyptian revolution of 2011 and the rise of Abdel Fattah al-Sisi to the Egyptian presidency, a few years could fundamentally change authors’ perspectives. The magnitude of change is probably best reflected in the new capital that the Egyptian government is building approximately 40 kilometers east of Cairo. Scholars have described this project as an “anti-Cairo” and its conclusion is set to affect the city. Demographic developments add to the image of transformation. Since the publication of Janet Abu-Lughod’s groundbreaking study The City Victorious in 1971, Cairo’s number of inhabitants has grown from around seven million to between fifteen and twenty-five million. In tandem with demographic growth, the city has been expanding into neighboring governorates along the Nile. Real estate companies and the state have also continued to develop new satellite cities at a distance from previously urbanized land. The Egyptian capital now extends much further along the Nile and also reaches deeper into the desert west and east of the city than it did five decades ago. While mapping is a politically fraught issue, David Sims estimated in 2010 that the newly planned towns around Cairo alone extend over a combined area of 1,174 square kilometers (Sims 2010, p. 172). This shifting terrain sets limits to any attempt at a comprehensive overview of literature about Cairo. Instead, the present bibliography seeks to capture continuity and change in scholarly literature on the city. It contains older works, which still inspire thinking about Cairo, as well as studies that focus on the city’s recent transformation over the past ten years. The bibliography is split into eight parts: General Overviews; Urban Planning, Architecture, and the Cityscape; The State and Urban Politics; Economy and Inequality; History; Neighborhoods; Gender and Sexuality; and Religion. This division reflects some of the priorities of scholarship about the city; it illustrates under which headings scholars have thought about Cairo. Such priorities have themselves invited criticism. Several titles in the categories of history or gender and sexuality demonstrate how the focus of scholarship has changed over time. In some studies, the dividing line between research on Cairo and Egypt also tends to become blurred. The particular political, cultural, and economic centralization of the country contributes to publications that are largely based on observations in Cairo, but are framed in terms of analyses of the whole country. It is therefore important to highlight that the city’s centrality endows it with an especially prominent place in studies of Egypt at large.


Author(s):  
Hüseyin Gül ◽  
İhsan Kamalak ◽  
Hakan Mehmet Kiriş

As a result of comprehensive reforms since the late 1990s, the structures, powers, functions and relations of the central government and local administrations, and of the state, market and civil society have been reshaped in Turkey. Besides, Turkey's democratic and administrative system and the local, metropolitan and regional administrations have been strengthened. This study focuses on the local and urban politics and elections as well as the local administration structure in Turkey. Accordingly, first, this chapter aims to present a conceptual and theoretical background for the paper on local and urban politics. Second, the paper gives a short review of the local administrative system in Turkey. Third, the study focuses on the types and characteristics of the local and urban politics and elections, actors involved, participation patterns, etc. Finally, a short review of the issues discussed in the chapter along with some recommendations is presented.


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