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Accommodating ‘generation rent’: Unsettling dominant discourses on rental housing reform in Catalonia and Spain Urban Studies (IF 4.418) Pub Date : 2024-03-04 Lorenzo Vidal, Javier Gil, Miguel A Martínez
In contemporary urban areas, a growing ‘generation rent’ is finding shelter in expensive and precarious private rental housing. Tenant organisations and legislative initiatives have been pushing to improve housing conditions for renters, yet have been met with strong resistance. Intense policy and academic debates have ensued. This paper delves into the discourses used by dominant actors involved in
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Commuting to the urban tech campus: Tech companies’ and their elite workers’ co-production of South Lake Union, Seattle Urban Studies (IF 4.418) Pub Date : 2024-03-04 Estelle Broyer
This article demonstrates how tech professionals commuting to neighbourhoods redeveloped for their work are contributing to their transformation into urban tech campuses: gentrified districts where landscapes, understandings of place and temporalities are shaped by their praise of innovation, emotional detachment from place, and daily ebb and flow. While also resulting in displacement, othering, and
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The politics of drains: Everyday negotiations of infrastructure imaginaries in Accra Urban Studies (IF 4.418) Pub Date : 2024-03-04 Afra Foli, Justus Uitermark
In this article we unpack the infrastructural imaginary of urban residents in a neighbourhood in the northern periphery of Accra in Ghana, focussing on drainage. Based on interviews and observations, we describe how residents characterise their neighbourhood’s development as a linear progression in stages, each marked by the completion of different infrastructures. Our analysis brings out the visceral
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Is hiding my first name enough? Using behavioural interventions to mitigate racial and gender discrimination in the rental housing market Urban Studies (IF 4.418) Pub Date : 2024-03-04 Helen XH Bao
This study investigates whether behavioural interventions can reduce racial and gender discrimination in the rental housing market. In our correspondence tests, we incorporated two specific behavioural interventions: providing employment details to assist letting agents in overcoming statistical discrimination and incorporating anti-discrimination messages to encourage adherence to the ‘Equality, Diversity
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‘Everything-old-is-new-again’: Private urban security governance responses to new harmscapes Urban Studies (IF 4.418) Pub Date : 2024-03-04 Julie Berg, Clifford Shearing
This article reflects on the proliferation of novel forms of private urban security governance assemblages, specifically the roles of private auspices and providers in responding to contemporary climate-related socio-material harmscapes. The authors use the lens of climatic harms and associated discursive shifts in understandings of the relationship between humans and ‘nature’ to draw attention to
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Growth and decline of a sustainable city: A multitemporal perspective on blue-black-green infrastructures at the pre-Columbian Lowland Maya city of Tikal Urban Studies (IF 4.418) Pub Date : 2024-02-29 Christian Isendahl, Nicholas P Dunning, Liwy Grazioso, Scott Hawken, David L Lentz, Vernon L Scarborough
The New Urban Agenda’s call for long-term visions in urban planning fails to recognise that ‘long-term’ implies different longevities depending on context of assessment. Compared to other social sciences, archaeological approaches add rigour to envisioning urban sustainability over several centuries and millennia. The archaeology of the pre-Columbian Lowland Maya urban tradition is an interesting case
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Introduction: Verticality, radicalism, resistance Urban Studies (IF 4.418) Pub Date : 2024-02-28 Casper Laing Ebbensgaard, Michał Murawski, Saffron Woodcraft, Katherine Zubovich
In recent decades urban scholarship has witnessed a ‘vertical’ or ‘volumetric’ turn that has advanced understandings of the multi-modal power asymmetries cutting through and organising urban space. Yet, this volumetric scholarship often remains locked into binary critiques – of success/failure, inclusion/exclusion, luxury/abjection, dispossession/accumulation, arborescent/rhizomatic, horizontal/vertical
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Book review: The Urban Rehabilitation of Post-Disaster Scapes Urban Studies (IF 4.418) Pub Date : 2024-02-26 Muhammad Rizal Pahleviannur
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Book review: Jakarta: The City of a Thousand Dimensions Urban Studies (IF 4.418) Pub Date : 2024-02-26 Gregory Bracken
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Those who leave: Out-migration and decentralisation of welfare beneficiaries in gentrified Paris Urban Studies (IF 4.418) Pub Date : 2024-02-19 Luc Guibard, Renaud Le Goix
In major metropolitan areas, gentrification, financialisation and welfare retrenchment contribute to a severe housing crisis. Over the past 20 years, home price inflation and affordable housing shrinkage have been particularly acute in Paris. Such issues have been linked to the displacement of lower-income Parisians and the suburbanisation of poverty on a regional scale. In this article, we match disaggregated
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Neighbourhood structure and environmental quality: A fine-grained analysis of spatial inequalities in urban Germany Urban Studies (IF 4.418) Pub Date : 2024-02-19 Christian König
Urban environments are characterised by sparsity of space, elevated levels of air pollution and limited exposure to natural environments. Yet, residential environmental quality varies substantially both between and within cities. This study combines information on the socio-economic and demographic composition of 243,607 urban neighbourhoods with administrative and remote sensing data on the spatial
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‘Security’ and private governance in São Paulo’s corporate centrality frontier Urban Studies (IF 4.418) Pub Date : 2024-02-15 Gabriella DD De Biaggi
In the last half-century, the ‘centre–periphery’ model has become insufficient to describe the increasingly fragmented and multicentric Latin American metropolises. Frontiers between central and peripheral areas are shifting, in part, due to the emergence of new corporate centralities, usually located outside historical city centres and heavily equipped with private ‘security’ agents and devices. By
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Place-oriented digital agency: Residents’ use of digital means to enhance neighbourhood change Urban Studies (IF 4.418) Pub Date : 2024-02-15 Hadas Zur
The smart city literature mostly focusses on digital initiatives from above. However, digitalisation also reshapes the city from below. Residents use digital means and platforms to empower their agency in the city. This paper aims to explore how residents utilise digital tools to activate their agency and influence local politics. The paper focusses on one neighbourhood in the city of Tel Aviv where
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Smart cities at the intersection of public governance paradigms for sustainability Urban Studies (IF 4.418) Pub Date : 2024-02-15 Giuseppe Grossi, Olga Welinder
As a research domain, the smart city keeps growing, despite the remaining contradictions and ambiguity related to its conceptual aspects. We propose to dig deeper into the complex socio-technical nature of the smart city and examine the concept through the lens of different public governance paradigms, therefore aligning it with the sustainability outcomes. Embracing interrelated dimensions of humans
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Doing sonic urban ethnography: Voices from Shanghai, Berlin and London Urban Studies (IF 4.418) Pub Date : 2024-02-14 Ana Aceska, Karolina Doughty, Muhammet Esat Tiryaki, Katherine Robinson, Eva Tisnikar, Fang Xu
Matters of sound and listening are increasingly being attended to across the social sciences and humanities, reflecting what has been termed a ‘sonic turn’ since the early 2000s. In urban ethnographic research, scholars are starting to pay attention to the role of sound in social relations, in expressions of identity and senses of belonging, as well as in processes of othering. In this paper, we explore
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Proximity as urban democratic legitimacy: Strategies of participation in Buenos Aires Urban Studies (IF 4.418) Pub Date : 2024-01-28 Sam Halvorsen, Rocio Annunziata
Since 2007, Buenos Aires has been governed by a centre-right coalition that has made participation an integral part of its approach to governance. Under mayor Horacio Rodríguez Larreta (2015–2023), the idea and practice of proximity became central, notably through weekly meetings with neighbours across the city. This article demonstrates that proximity was a strategy for building urban democratic legitimacy
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Inventraset assemblages: The spatial logic of informal street vending, transport and settlement Urban Studies (IF 4.418) Pub Date : 2024-01-28 Kim Dovey, Redento B Recio
Urban informality remains a central challenge for those engaged in understanding and transforming global South cities. There have been calls to develop new conceptual language geared to this challenge and much debate around the degree to which it might be subsumed within global urban theory. We argue that theories of informal urbanism need to be grounded in an understanding of how it works to sustain
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What is local government financialisation? Four empirical channels to clarify the roles of local government Urban Studies (IF 4.418) Pub Date : 2024-01-28 Hannah Hasenberger
Recent literature at the nexus of geography and political economy notes that local governments are becoming financialised. But it is not always clear what this means. Specifically, what is being financialised? And what is the role of local governments in this process? Building on Whiteside’s definition of local state-led financialisation as enabled and internal, this article combines a systematic literature
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Local policy-making within the multilevel system: A study of governance in peripheral(ised) medium-sized cities undergoing socio-economic transformation in Saxony, Germany and Lower Silesia, Poland Urban Studies (IF 4.418) Pub Date : 2024-01-28 Rafał Gajewski, Robert Knippschild
Our motivation for undertaking this research was to verify the scope and results of public policies aimed at supporting peripheralised medium-sized cities, and to check how these policies have been perceived by stakeholders within these cities. We selected the Polish-German borderland as a case region for this, primarily due to a particular concentration of cities experiencing the detrimental effects
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Back to the suburbs? Millennial residential locations from the Great Recession to the pandemic Urban Studies (IF 4.418) Pub Date : 2024-01-28 Hyojung Lee, Whitney Airgood-Obrycki, Riordan Frost
In the past decade, there has been a great deal of attention paid to and speculation about the residential mobility and location decisions of millennials. Academics and practitioners alike have been trying to determine where millennials are moving and why, including whether they are leading a ‘back to the city’ movement or whether they are moving to the suburbs as previous generations did at their
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Sanitation configurations in Lilongwe: Everyday experiences on and off the grid Urban Studies (IF 4.418) Pub Date : 2024-01-22 Cecilia Alda-Vidal, Alison L Browne, Mary Lawhon, Deljana Iossifova
Scholars have called for increased attention to the practices through which residents of southern cities create and use infrastructure. The failures and disruptions of many particular artefacts have meant that people often develop multiple ways to access water, electricity, or transportation, even if all of them have limitations. For sanitation, thinking through heterogeneous infrastructure configurations
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Urban heat islands and the transformation of Singapore Urban Studies (IF 4.418) Pub Date : 2024-01-22 Yoonhee Jung
An urban heat island is defined as an urban area that experiences warmer temperatures than its surroundings. This study examines how Singapore’s planning efforts established after the mid-20th century have affected the thermal environment of the city in association with land transformation, using historical temperature data available from the Meteorological Service of Singapore and some historical
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Constitutive outsides or hidden abodes? Totality and ideology in critical urban theory Urban Studies (IF 4.418) Pub Date : 2024-01-22 William Conroy
In the context of hotly contested debates within critical urban theory, many scholars have recently attempted (both implicitly and explicitly) to move beyond the relational-dialectical concept of ‘totality’, taking up the notion of ‘the constitutive outside’ in its place. With this in view, this article seeks to (1) develop a critique of the ways in which the concept of the constitutive outside is
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Deconstructing the urban viewpoint: Exploring uneven regional development with Nancy Fraser’s notion of justice Urban Studies (IF 4.418) Pub Date : 2024-01-22 Kristina Grange, Nils Björling, Lina Olsson, Julia Fredriksson
Uneven regional development fomented by city-centric growth agendas generates significant challenges for regional peripheries. Placing regional margins and other plural geographies at the centre, in this article we apply a normative framework based on justice theory to uncover the dominance of urban viewpoints in urban regional development policy. Departing from Nancy Fraser’s three-dimensional justice
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Informality through the state: How overregulation and tolerance shape informal land development in metropolitan Brazil Urban Studies (IF 4.418) Pub Date : 2024-01-22 João Tonucci
The relationship between the state and informal land development in Global South metropolises has yet not received much attention in urban studies. Concerning that knowledge gap, this paper investigates how the state regulates and inspects irregular and clandestine land subdivisions in the Metropolitan Region of Belo Horizonte (MRBH). A mixed-methods approach, focused on the inner workings of the land
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Navigating spatial inequalities: The micro-politics of migrant dwelling practices during COVID-19 in Antwerp Urban Studies (IF 4.418) Pub Date : 2024-01-18 Hannah Robinson, Jil Molenaar, Lore Van Praag
The COVID-19 pandemic and its multiple lockdowns disrupted city life, while restrictions on physical distancing and urban activities highlighted the importance of our living environment and its links to our well-being. As part of the COVINFORM research project, this case study uses a micro-political lens to explore the specific spatial challenges which migrants faced in two of the more socially deprived
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Caring and commoning in political society: Insights from the Scugnizzo Liberato of Naples Urban Studies (IF 4.418) Pub Date : 2024-01-18 Roberto Sciarelli
Recent research has highlighted the connection between commoning processes and the creation of new infrastructures of care in the areas of Southern Europe which were most affected by austerity policies and by the connected crisis of social reproduction. The objective of this paper is to shed new light on the caring practices organised through and within urban commons by using the theoretical lenses
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Housing movement coalitions in the United States: Trends from big networks among urban civil society leaders Urban Studies (IF 4.418) Pub Date : 2024-01-06 Andrew Messamore
Coalitions of formal housing, civil rights and anti-poverty organisations play an important role in urban housing movements. However, the extent and dynamics of these ‘housing movement coalitions’ are not well understood. In this article, I document the geography of housing movement coalitions across 148 US cities using leadership networks among 11.8 million civic leaders. I show that cohesive coalitions
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Social ties in and out of the neighbourhood: Between compensation and cumulation Urban Studies (IF 4.418) Pub Date : 2024-01-06 Joanie Cayouette-Remblière, Eric Charmes
The central question addressed in this article is how social ties within and outside the neighbourhood are articulated in different contexts for various population groups. Two major perspectives emerge from the literature on personal networks, neighbourhood effects, and neighbourhood-based social capital. The first assumes a compensation mechanism, whereby local and extra-local ties flourish at each
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Diverging mobility situations in Greater Mexico City: Exploring the factors behind the mobility situations of public transport commuters Urban Studies (IF 4.418) Pub Date : 2024-01-04 David López-García
This article investigates the factors behind the likelihood of experiencing a specific type of mobility situation. The case of commuting by public transport in Greater Mexico City is analysed. A one-way ANOVA with post-hoc procedures and three multinomial logistic regression models are used to assess the extent to which transport-, land use- or socio-economic-related variables influence the likelihood
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Urban public health emergencies and the COVID-19 pandemic. Part 2: Infrastructures, urban governance and civil society. Urban Studies (IF 4.418) Pub Date : 2023-06-28 Yingling Fan,Scott Orford,Philip Hubbard
COVID-19 had sudden and dramatic impacts on the organisation and governance of urban life. In Part 2 of this Special Issue on public health emergencies we question the extent to which the pandemic ushered in fundamentally new understandings of urban public health, noting that ideas of urban pathology and the relation of dirt, disease and danger in cities, have long informed practices of planning. Emphasising
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A contingent publicness: Entanglements on buses. Urban Studies (IF 4.418) Pub Date : 2023-06-02 Yogi Joseph,Govind Gopakumar
A lacuna in our understanding of how publicness of public transit is being constituted is the primary point of departure for this paper. In recent times, publicness has been articulated through two parallel readings - one, a political economic reading that sees publicness through static macrostructural constraints; and two, micro-sociality aboard public transit manifests an in situ and spontaneous
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Urban public health emergencies and the COVID-19 pandemic. Part 1: Social and spatial inequalities in the COVID-city. Urban Studies (IF 4.418) Pub Date : 2023-05-31 Scott Orford,Yingling Fan,Philip Hubbard
COVID-19 has had unprecedented impacts on urban life on a global scale, representing the worst pandemic in living memory. In this introduction to the first of two parts of a Special Issue on urban public health emergencies, we suggest that the COVID-19 outbreak, and associated attempts to manage the pandemic, reproduced and ultimately exacerbated the social and spatial divides that striate the contemporary
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Rethinking urban utopianism: The fallacy of social mix in the 15-minute city Urban Studies (IF 4.418) Pub Date : 2023-05-16 Giada Casarin, Julie MacLeavy, David Manley
The concept of urban living is evolving, and there is a growing interest in creating smaller, more connected, and hyperlocal neighbourhoods, where everything people need is within a 15-minute walk ...
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By yourself, yet not alone: Making space for loneliness Urban Studies (IF 4.418) Pub Date : 2023-05-08 Luzia Cassis Heu, Tom Brennecke
Urban designers often aim to reduce the subjective feeling of loneliness through more opportunities for social interaction in (semi-)public space. These approaches may benefit people who feel lonel...
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Recommoning water: Crossing thresholds under citizen-driven remunicipalisation Urban Studies (IF 4.418) Pub Date : 2023-05-08 Dona Geagea, Maria Kaika, Jampel Dell’Angelo
Since 2008, the call to ‘remunicipalise’ water resources has become a key strategy for water movements across Europe. Remunicipalisation aimed at opposing the new wave of privatisation programmes a...
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Obliged smart freedom: The Singaporean experience of advanced neoliberal-developmental governance Urban Studies (IF 4.418) Pub Date : 2023-05-08 Aisha Sobey
Despite criticism, the smart city solutionist rhetoric has gained popularity and investment across the world. In response, this paper interrogates the notion of neutrality in smart city projects an...
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The relevance of job accessibility to labour market outcomes: Evidence for the São Paulo metropolitan region Urban Studies (IF 4.418) Pub Date : 2023-04-24 Leandro Batista Duarte, Raul da Mota Silveira Neto, Diego Firmino Costa da Silva
Focusing on the case of the São Paulo Metropolitan Region, the largest urban centre in South America, this study provides evidence of the effect of job accessibility on three different labour marke...
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What if autonomous vehicles had been introduced into cities? A counterfactual analysis Urban Studies (IF 4.418) Pub Date : 2023-04-24 Haotian Zhong, Wei Li
The impact of autonomous vehicles on the spatial size of cities remains ambiguous, as the future is highly uncertain. This paper uses counterfactual analysis techniques to examine the effects of au...
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Commodifying Havana? Private accumulation, assetisation and marketisation in the Cuban metropolis Urban Studies (IF 4.418) Pub Date : 2023-04-24 Gertjan Wijburg
In the Global South, cities are increasingly restructuring themselves around the financial pressures of international capital markets. Therefore, it is sometimes hypothesised that financial innovat...
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Gentrifying with family wealth: Parental gifts and neighbourhood sorting among young adult owner-occupants Urban Studies (IF 4.418) Pub Date : 2023-04-24 Wouter van Gent, Rik Damhuis, Sako Musterd
This paper assesses the role of parental gifts in neighbourhood sorting among young adult homebuyers. We make use of high-quality individual-level registry data for two large urban metropolitan are...
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A transport of one’s own: Women in contemporary Mexico City’s public transport through the lens of photojournalism Urban Studies (IF 4.418) Pub Date : 2023-04-17 Teresa Franco
This article proposes the use of photojournalism to understand women’s urban mobility practices in contemporary Mexico City. Throughout the analysis, a variety of issues such as economic violence, ...
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Income polarisation, expenditure and the Australian urban middle class Urban Studies (IF 4.418) Pub Date : 2023-04-17 Ilan Wiesel, Julia de Bruyn, Jordy Meekes, Sangeetha Chandrashekeran
Recent years have seen growing concern about the ‘hollowing out’ of the middle class, due to processes of polarisation. In this paper, we examine different conceptualisations of polarisation, and i...
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Queering utopia: Pride walks in modernist Chandigarh Urban Studies (IF 4.418) Pub Date : 2023-04-17 Preetika Sharma, Kanchan Gandhi, Anu Sabhlok
In this paper, we queer the understanding of urban spaces to move forward a utopian project. ‘Let this be a new town unfettered by the traditions of the past, a step into the future’, proclaimed Ne...
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Comparative urbanism for hope and healing: Urbicide and the dilemmas of reconstruction in post-war Syria and Poland Urban Studies (IF 4.418) Pub Date : 2023-04-17 Joanna Kusiak, Ammar Azzouz
This paper expands the repertoire of comparative urbanism by putting forward a method of ‘hopeful comparison’, in which we explore an asynchronous comparison between post-war Poland and Syria. Simi...
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Change or stability in educational inequalities? Educational mobility and school effects in the context of a major urban policy Urban Studies (IF 4.418) Pub Date : 2023-04-11 Gijs Custers, Marjolijn Das, Godfried Engbersen
Urban areas are facing increasing social inequalities, which governments try to tackle with social policy. This study examines one of the most ambitious urban policies in the history of Dutch polic...
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Framing urban threats: A socio-spatial analysis of urban securitisation in Latin America and the Caribbean Urban Studies (IF 4.418) Pub Date : 2023-04-11 Alexandra Abello Colak, Melanie Lombard, Valeria Guarneros-Meza
In the context of growing concern with violence in Latin American and Caribbean cities this paper offers an analytical synthesis of urban securitisation which involves the construction of issues, s...
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Long-term trends in settlement persistence in Southwest Asia: Implications for sustainable urbanism, past, present and future Urban Studies (IF 4.418) Pub Date : 2023-04-05 Dan Lawrence, Michelle W de Gruchy, Israel Hinojosa-Baliño, Abdulameer Al-Hamdani
Southwest Asia saw the emergence of large settlements in the Early Holocene, and the world’s first urban communities around 6000 years ago, with cities a feature of the region ever since. These dev...
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Making sense of segregation: Transitional thinking and contested space Urban Studies (IF 4.418) Pub Date : 2023-03-29 Joanne Murphy, Sara McDowell
In segregated societies space is typically a source of conflict and confusion. Everyday geographies are often navigated through complex patterns of movement that are sensitive to the ‘other’ and th...
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Beyond the pale: Fencing off parks for festivals Urban Studies (IF 4.418) Pub Date : 2023-03-29 Andrew Smith
Pale is the Old English word for fence, and the phrase ‘to go beyond the pale’ means to stray beyond the limits of acceptable action. In this critical commentary I discuss whether the installation ...
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Examining the long-term influence of New Deal era redlining on contemporary gentrification Urban Studies (IF 4.418) Pub Date : 2023-03-29 Joseph Gibbons
The New Deal era’s Home Owners Loan Corporation (HOLC) programme has garnered notoriety for denying Black communities financial investment based on their race through the practice known as redlinin...
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Urbanizing degrowth: Five steps towards a Radical Spatial Degrowth Agenda for planning in the face of climate emergency Urban Studies (IF 4.418) Pub Date : 2023-03-26 Maria Kaika, Angelos Varvarousis, Federico Demaria, Hug March
We call for coupling degrowth with urban studies and planning agendas as an academically salient and politically urgent endeavour. Our aim is threefold: to explore ways for ‘operationalising’ degro...
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How buses alleviate unemployment and poverty: Lessons from a natural experiment in Clayton, GA Urban Studies (IF 4.418) Pub Date : 2023-03-21 Fei Li, Christopher Kajetan Wyczalkowski
Many studies have documented the linkage between public transportation and economic outcomes, though there is relatively little empirical evidence on the consequences of losing existing transit ser...
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Land-use reforms and housing costs: Does allowing for increased density lead to greater affordability? Urban Studies (IF 4.418) Pub Date : 2023-03-21 Christina Stacy, Chris Davis, Yonah Slifkin Freemark, Lydia Lo, Graham MacDonald, Vivian Zheng, Rolf Pendall
We generate the first cross-city panel dataset of land-use reforms that increase or decrease allowed housing density and estimate their association with changes in housing supply and rents. To gene...
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Citizen security and urban commuting in Latin America Urban Studies (IF 4.418) Pub Date : 2023-03-21 José Ignacio Giménez-Nadal, Lucía Echeverría, Alberto Molina
Sustainable modes of transport, including both public transit and active transport, have been promoted as strategies to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. However, one factor that may influence their...
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Settlement policy in an Israeli mixed city: A typology of displacement and its resistance Urban Studies (IF 4.418) Pub Date : 2023-03-21 Yael Shmaryahu-Yeshurun
Urban Studies from the Global North highlight the physical displacement of lower-income residents as urban development policies’ central transgression. However, looking only at the class-physical a...
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The rise of single-family rentals and the relationship to opportunity neighbourhoods for low-income families with children Urban Studies (IF 4.418) Pub Date : 2023-03-18 Sahar Khaleel, Bernadette Hanlon
Single-family homes make up a significant portion of the rental housing market in the United States. Single-family rentals grew significantly in recent years, especially with the emergence of large...
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Plug-in urbanism: City building and the parodic guise of new infrastructure in Africa Urban Studies (IF 4.418) Pub Date : 2023-03-18 Prince K Guma, Jethron Ayumbah Akallah, Jack Ong’iro Odeo
Across Africa, cities have become fodder for grand-scale foreign investments and redevelopment projects signifying a distinct phenomenon synonymous with a new kind of urbanism. This paper offers a ...
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The ‘kampung formula’: Infrastructural adventurism and public art in Semarang, Indonesia Urban Studies (IF 4.418) Pub Date : 2023-03-18 Lukas Ley
Describing the artistic and curatorial work of the Indonesian art collective Hysteria over the last 15 years, this paper considers public art as a practice of devising relations with various urban ...
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Using natural language processing to construct a National Zoning and Land Use Database Urban Studies (IF 4.418) Pub Date : 2023-03-16 Matthew Mleczko, Matthew Desmond
In the United States, zoning and land use policies have been linked to high housing costs and residential segregation. Yet almost all zoning and land use data come from a handful of cross-sectional...