Webpdf
Webpdf
This extensively revised and updated fifth edition not only examines the new
geographical patterns forming within and between cities, but also investigates the way
geographers have sought to make sense of this urban transformation. Urban Geography
is structured into three sections: ‘contexts’, ‘themes’ and ‘issues’ that move students
from a foundation in urban geography through its major themes to contemporary and
pressing issues. The text critically synthesizes key literatures in the following areas:
●● an urban world
●● changing approaches to urban geography
●● urban form and structure
●● economy and the city
●● urban politics
●● planning, regeneration and urban policy
●● cities and culture
●● architecture and urban landscapes
●● images of the city
●● experiencing the city
●● housing and residential segregation
●● transport, mobility and the city
●● urban futures.
The fifth edition combines the topicality and accessibility of previous editions with
extensive new material, including two new chapters on mobility and cities and urban
futures, as well as a wealth of international case studies, extending its range of coverage
across the field. This book features enhanced pedagogy including a range
of new illustrations and tables, an abstract for each chapter, end of chapter essay
questions and project activities, and annotated further reading from books, journals and
websites. Written in an engaging, student-friendly style, this is an essential read for
students and scholars of urban geography.
Tim Hall is Professor of Interdisciplinary Social Studies and Head of the Department of
Applied Social Sciences at the University of Winchester, UK.
Heather Barrett is Deputy Head of the Institute of Science and the Environment and
Principal Lecturer at the University of Worcester, UK.
Routledge Contemporary Human
Geography Series
Series Editors:
David Bell, Manchester Metropolitan University
Stephen Wynn Williams, Staffordshire University
This series of texts offers stimulating introductions to the core subdisciplines of human
geography. Building between ‘traditional’ approaches to subdisciplinary studies and
contemporary treatments of these same issues, these concise introductions respond
particularly to the new demands of modular courses. Uniformly designed, with a focus
on student-friendly features, these books will form a coherent series which is up-to-date
and reliable.
Existing Titles:
Cultural Geography
Mike Crang
Development Geography
Rupert Hodder
Political Geography
Mark Blacksell
Section 1: contexts 1
1 An urban world 3
2 Changing approaches 17
3 Urban form and structure 28
Section 2: themes 53
4 City economies 55
5 Urban politics 97
6 Planning, regeneration and urban policy 122
7 Cities and culture 156
Glossary329
Bibliography333
Index374
Figures
1.1
Annual growth rate of the world’s cities by region and
city size 1990–2000 7
1.2
The world’s megacities 2007 and 2025 9
3.1
Tulum, Mexico, reflecting the religious and cultural beliefs
of the Mayan civilization 32
3.2
(a) A model of the pre-industrial city, (b) Pre-industrial London 33
3.3
Models of the industrial city 38
3.4
Model of fringe belt development 40
3.5
The dual city, juxtaposing the traditional Islamic medina and
colonial extension, Sfax Tunisia 44
3.6
The post-modern city 46
4.1
The circuits of capital 58
4.2
The hierarchy of world cities 66
4.3
Cartogram of alpha world cities in 2008 69
4.4
(a) Sheepcote Street canal area, Birmingham in the late
1980s prior to redevelopment (b) The same area today, part
of the Convention Quarter redevelopment close to the
National Indoor Arena 75
4.5
Docklands, London, the focus for major producer service
expansion in the 1980s and 1990s with new office buildings
in close proximity to poor urban communities 83
4.6
Pier 39, San Francisco, US – a festival retail-leisure
development 86
4.7
Informal street trading in Marseille, France 91
4.8
Characteristics of the formal and informal sectors 92
5.1
Museum of Contemporary Art, Barcelona 117
6.1
Common themes in urban planning and policy 125
6.2
Howard’s vision of the social city 129
6.3
Letchworth Garden City 130
6.4
Le Corbusier’s Radiant City 132
viii • List of figures
The authors would like to thank the students on the modules ‘Understanding
Urban and Rural Societies’ (Winchester) and ‘Urban Geography’ (Worcester)
for providing lively settings in which many of the ideas in this book were first
raised and discussed. We would also like to thank Cath (Tim) and Martyn
(Heather) for helping to keep us sane during the writing of this book. A great
deal of thanks is also due to Andrew Mould and Egle Zigaite for their assistance
in the production of this book and their patience as deadlines slipped by. Their
efforts have been vital to the production of this volume.
Please can we pass on our thanks to the following for granting permission for
material that has been reproduced here: Geographical Association (figure 3.3);
Routledge (figures 3.6, 8.4 and 10.6; table 12.2); Alan Dixon (figure 4.7);
Topical Press Agency (figure 6.3); FLC/ADAGP, Paris and DACS (figure 6.4);
VEGAP, Madrid and DACS London (figure 7.3b); Tate Images, ADAGP, Paris
and DACS, London (figures 9.1), Cástan Broto & Bulkeley/UN-HABITAT
(table 13.1).
Every effort has been made to contact copyright holders for their permission to
reprint material in this book. The publisher would be grateful to hear from any
copyright holder who is not here acknowledged and will undertake to rectify
any errors or omissions in future editions of this book.
Section 1
Contexts
1 An urban world
Introduction
We live in an urban world, or, more accurately, many different urban worlds.
In July 2007, for the first time in human history, the majority of the world’s
population resided in cities. This event, hailed as monumental in much media
coverage, was, in itself, of little more than symbolic importance. The trends,
most notably massive urban growth in the Global South, had been apparent for
some time and show no sign of slowing down, let alone reversing. It is against
this background, a growing, dynamic urban world characterized by increasing
interconnection and inequality that faces challenges in the near future, including
peak oil and probable climate chaos, that this book invites you into the world
of urban geography. Urban geography texts always argue that their publication
coincides with exciting and challenging times for the city. They are always
correct. Whatever cities might be they are never boring.
The dynamic and diverse nature of the urban world presents a significant
challenge for those attempting to write a textbook to guide students through its
complexities. For a general textbook, the aim should be to provide the student
with as comprehensive an overview as possible. However, this is always only
ever partially fulfilled. Textbooks, such as this one, are written by authors who
approach the study of the city in particular ways, drawing on their own set of
knowledge and experiences. Who writes the book and where they are based
matters. This has been a key issue raised about urban geographical writing on
the city, where it has been pointed out that in reality universal ideas and theories
about the city are only ever partial (see, for example, Robinson 2005a).
It is therefore an important starting point for researchers and writers to
acknowledge and understand their own perspective and position in any piece
of work. We are two urban geographers who were born and brought up in
the United Kingdom (UK) and who have worked mainly in UK universities.
Our professional discussions and experience have mainly been with others
in Europe and North America. This has inevitably shaped our approaches to
studying cities. While we have tried to move beyond the specifics of our urban
experiences in this book, by focusing on exploring the broader processes
shaping cities, where we make these abstract ideas concrete we will often draw
on examples from our own experiences. Therefore, the coverage of examples
used and issues raised will, like other textbooks, not reflect the urban world in
4 • Contexts
all its diversity. This is where we invite you to build on what we have written
here and to add your own perspectives and experiences. Throughout the book
we have tried to offer you exercises and opportunities to reflect on your own
knowledge of the urban and to consider the ways in which the urban realities
that you inhabit and experience are shaped by these broader processes. So let
us begin with your urban geographies …
This is a book written first and foremost for students. Its objective, therefore, is
to equip you, the student with enough knowledge of cities and the ways that
they have been thought about and researched, primarily but not exclusively
from within urban geography, to allow you to understand key aspects of cities
and to become an urban geographer in your own right.
As a student of urban geography, or one of its many cognate disciplines, you
are likely to encounter cities and to address urban questions in many different
ways. These may include abstract discussions of urban theory; essays and
reports that ask you to pull together, synthesize and analyse a range of
examples, typically in the light of theory or policy; assignments that require
you to analyse secondary data and draw conclusions on the basis of this; or
projects that ask you to go out and conduct some original research and collect
your own data in one or more urban settings. Of the latter, the fieldtrip and the
independent study or dissertation are among the most common, and typically,
most rewarding, academic encounters with the city. Cities are such fascinating
environments that it would be a great shame if this book did not encourage you
to brave the weather and to get out and study the city, to perhaps look at the
taken-for-granted urban environment that you pass through every day with
fresh eyes. Alternatively, you might encounter the city through its many
representations – films, novels, advertisements, media reports or computer
games for example – and be asked to critically analyse the nature of these
images and perhaps their significance. As you read this book think about what
motivates you and about what you want your urban geographies to be, where
they might take you and what they might contribute to the city. There is more
to urban geography than just writing essays.
So, where do you begin? Well, for a start, it is unlikely that those of you
reading this book have not encountered a city in some way or another, either
as a resident of one or through reference to cities and urban life through
a range of media, such as a book, television programme or film. It is
worthwhile, therefore, asking you to reflect on what you already know
about cities.
An urban world • 5
Exercise
Hopefully, the list you have generated is quite diverse, and this should give you
an indication of the breadth of material that can be covered when examining
cities. Your list may include things that define urban areas (population size,
geographical boundaries, legal definitions), things urban areas possess
(landscapes, buildings, infrastructure, activities) or attributes associated with the
city (noisy, crowded, dangerous, creative, exciting, vibrant, polluted). It might
also identify urban concerns at different levels, or geographical scales, from
personal issues (conditions in your local neighbourhood) to things of global
concern (the sustainability of urban growth). This indicates that there is not one
city but many ‘cities’ and also many topics for urban geographers to study.
Your personal experiences of, and knowledge about, cities are an important
starting point for developing your understanding of ‘the urban’. However, as
theories of learning suggest, personal experience in itself is not sufficient to
develop thorough knowledge of an issue, and this experience needs to be built
upon in order to develop a deeper understanding through a ‘cycle of learning’
(see Kolb 1984). So in order to develop your critical understanding of cities you
need to reflect on your experiences and make sense of these by contextualizing
your experience and knowledge in relation to other information about cities.
Here you need to use your research skills to gather appropriate data/evidence
on urban trends and issues – in the section below we outline some broad trends in
contemporary urban development which will provide a starting point for thinking
about these wider issues and setting your experiences in context, which will then
be further developed throughout the book. The next stage of the ‘cycle’ in
developing your critical understanding is to think about your experiences and this
broader evidence and make sense of these through abstract conceptualization.
6 • Contexts
Here you will draw upon wider theories and concepts about urban development,
change and experience in order to draw together these various strands of evidence
and place them in the broader context of writing about cities. In the next chapter
we will consider the development of urban geographical theory in order to
provide a foundation for your own theorizing. Through this you will develop
your critical knowledge and understanding about cities and urban life which will
provide the foundation for your further experiences of and research into cities, so
completing one round of the learning cycle.
In beginning to build on our more personal experiences of urban life and
set these into a wider context we want to consider three important ideas
underpinning the multiple geographies of the urban world which highlight
some key trends in urban development and ways of thinking about cities. The
first important idea is to place ourselves within the broader trends of urban
development and change, or rather to consider the macro geographies of the
urban world. Here it is useful to examine broad patterns in urban development
at the global scale which emphasize the diversity in trends around the world. A
second important idea to consider is the increasing connectedness of the world,
where people and places are increasingly linked together in complex economic,
political and cultural networks. Finally, it is important to consider how these
broader processes are mediated by local contexts, thinking about the internal
geographies of cities and the complexity of our urban lives and experiences.
These key ideas about the urban world are introduced in the next section and
underpin subsequent discussions about the urban which follow in the book.
A core question for anyone interested in studying cities is how many urban people
there are in the world and where they live. Until the second half of the twentieth
century significant urban development, or urbanization, was limited and spatially
concentrated into a number of key regions, principally Europe, North America
and Latin America. More recently, within these more urbanized societies, urban
growth has been slow and the increases in urban populations relatively modest
(figure 1.1). The most significant growth in the last thirty years has taken place in
those parts of the world with low percentages of urban populations, with this
predicted to increase in the near future. In particular, urban growth has been rapid
in Asia, with China and India having particularly large and increasing urban
populations. Growth has also been significant within Africa (figure 1.1).
Within these broad regional figures significant variation exists, and a more
detailed examination of the recent trends in urbanization reveals that the urban
world is far from uniform. Urban development is certainly changing the spatial
organization of the world’s economy and society, but at different rates in
An urban world • 7
Figure 1.1 Annual growth rate of the world’s cities by region and city size 1990–2000
Source: Adapted from UN-HABITAT Global Urban Observatory (2008)
Exercise
From looking at the data an important issue emerges for those studying ‘the
urban’, namely that most of the world’s urban population live outside the
developed world and also mainly in smaller or medium sized cities. Yet much
of the urban geographical writing on cities that has been widely published has
focused on larger cities, located within developed regions. It is therefore clearly
a challenge to urban scholars to address these issues and to produce work that
speaks to the urban world in its full diversity (Hubbard 2006; Robinson 2005a).
Another key urban trend has been the increase in the number and location of
the world’s megacities, defined as those with over 10 million inhabitants. It is
predicted that the number of megacities in the world will increase to 27 by 2025,
with the majority of these being located outside the developed world (see
figure 1.2). The city of Mumbai is predicted to become the largest megacity
after Tokyo, which will retain its top spot, while many megacities in developed
regions, such as New York-Newark, will slip down the rankings. The increasing
number and changing distribution of these large global cities has captured the
imagination of commentators and researchers in recent years. The emergence
of new megacities has prompted questions about the processes fuelling these
changing patterns (urbanization), the varying role and status that cities in the
world possess and the ways in which cities are connected to one another on a
global scale. A fundamental question has been whether the rise of these new
megacities heralds a shift in the distribution of the planet’s most powerful and
connected cities, or world cities.
Throughout the twentieth century, the colonial capitals and industrial cities of
Northern Europe and North America were some of the world’s largest cities and
acted as key nodes through which goods, information and people flowed and as
An urban world • 9
2007 2025
Population Population
(Thousands) (Thousands)
1 Tokyo 35,676 1 Tokyo 36,400
2 MexicoCity 19,028 2 Mumbai 26,385
8 New York-Newark 19,040 3 Delhi 22,498
4 Säo Paulo 18,845 4 Dhaka 22,015
11 Mumbai 18,978 5 Säo Paulo 21428
6 Delhi 15,926 6 Mexlco City 21009
7 Shanghai 14,987 7 New YOrK-NewarK 20628
8 Kolkata 14,787 8 Kolkata 20560
8 Buenos Aires 12,795 9 Shanghal 19412
10 Dhaka 13,485 10 Karachl 19,095
11 Los Angeles-Long 12,500 11 Kinshasa 16762
Beach-Santa Ana 12 Laaos 15796
12 Karachi 12130 13 Cairo 15,561
18 Rio de Janeiro 11748 14 Manila 14,808
14 Osaka-Kobe 11294 15 Beljlng 14,545
111 Calro 11893 16 Buenos Alres 13,768
16 Beiiina 11,106 17 Los Angeles-Long 13,672
17 Manila 11,100 Beach-Santa Ana
18 Moscow 10,452 18 Rio de Janeiro 13413
18 Istanbul 10061 19 Jakarta 12,363
Cities located near a large water body 20 Istanbul 12,102
(ses, river or delta) 21 Guangzhou Guangdong 11,835
22 Osaka-Kobe 11,368
23 Moscow 10,526
24 Lahore 10,512
25 Shenzhen 10,196
26 Chennal 10,129
New megacities
centres where wealth was generated and power exercised. However, it is clear
that the role and status of cities is shifting within our increasingly globalized
world, where the speed, spread and depth of economic, political and cultural
linkages is increasing and changing (Brenner and Keil 2006). The search for
power and economic prosperity among a growing number of large global cities,
acting within an increasingly unstable and unpredictable world, has generated
intense competition between cities to gain status by encouraging growth
through city marketing and planning activities. Here cities are seen to be acting
increasingly entrepreneurially in order to attract the right activities and people
with which to stimulate growth (Hall and Hubbard 1996, 1998).
Recent research has also sought to quantify the relative power and connectivity
of cities on a global scale, most notably the work of the Global and World
Cities (GaWC) Research Group based at Loughborough University in the
United Kingdom (www.lboro.ac.uk/gawc/index.html). What this research
suggests is that the most powerful and connected of the world’s cities remain
those of the Global North, despite their diminishing relative population size,
10 • Contexts
and that the newly emerging megacities of much of the Global South lack
significant global economic and political power despite their large size. It
should be noted, however, that the criteria generally used to define status can
be seen as ‘capitalist’ and ‘western’ in their conception, potentially excluding
many cities defined as globally important by other criteria (Robinson 2005b).
An alternative view would consider all cities as inherently global in some way
but as differently positioned within a multitude of global networks (this is
explored again in chapter two).
Finally, the trends in growth and change in urban populations around the world
raise a number of significant issues for city dwellers and the managers of cities.
At the heart of these concerns is the long-term sustainability of current urban
trends and lifestyles, particularly the environmental impacts of city growth and
problems of poverty and inequality within cities. For example, as noted above,
Mumbai in India is predicted to become the world’s second largest megacity.
Its current growth and increasing global profile have led to the city becoming
something of a key exemplar of the issues and concerns that could face many
cities in the twenty-first century. In particular, its use in a number of recent
books and films has led to wider global public awareness of the city and the
issues it faces. For example, the widely acclaimed film Slumdog Millionaire
released in late 2008 was set against the backdrop of Mumbai.
The film’s story highlights both the magic and the horrors of life within this vast
and rapidly changing city, and also some of the realities of everyday life in the
city and the problems of poverty faced by many of its inhabitants. Consideration
of films such as this that highlight life within cities should raise questions in our
minds about why life portrayed in the city is the way it is and also the extent to
which this is similar to or different from that with which we are familiar from
our own urban experiences. Indeed, these are some of the key questions about
urban life, or urbanism, that have been long-standing concerns of urban
geographers, among others.
Yet, concerns about the impacts of rapid urban growth and change and the
problems of life in cities are not merely a twenty-first century phenomenon.
Anxieties about urban life have been evident since the rise of large industrial
cities in Europe and North America in the nineteenth century. The rapid, largely
unplanned, growth of these cities also generated fears about their social and
environmental impact. Then, as now, these concerns were most eloquently
expressed in some of the fictional writings of the period, such as the work of
Charles Dickens on life in Britain’s industrial towns in the nineteenth century.
Much of his work graphically portrays the problems associated with poor living
conditions within these cities:
An urban world • 11
It [Coketown] was a town of red brick, or of brick that would have been red
if the smoke and ashes had allowed it; but as matters stood, it was a town of
unnatural red and black like the painted face of a savage. It was a town of
machinery and tall chimneys, out of which interminable serpents of smoke
trailed themselves for ever and ever, and never got uncoiled. It had a black
canal in it, and a river that ran purple with ill-smelling dye, and vast piles of
building full of windows where there was a rattling and a trembling all day
long, and where the piston of the steam-engine worked monotonously up and
down, like the head of an elephant in a state of melancholy madness. It
contained several large streets all very like one another, and many small
streets still more like one another, inhabited by people equally like one
another, who all went in and out at the same hours, with the same sound upon
the same pavements, to do the same work, and to whom every day was the
same as yesterday and tomorrow, and every year the counterpart of the last
and the next.
Charles Dickens, Hard Times (1854)
This work, among other fictional and non-fictional writing, contributed to the
formation of negative attitudes to urban life (anti-urbanism), where the city
became associated with problems of poverty, disease, pollution, violence and
alienation (Gold and Revill 2004). However, the impact of this urban growth,
and the anti-urban reactions to it, did help generate both research into cities and
moves to better manage them, which we consider later in the book. Yet despite
these efforts, anti-urban representations of urban life remain prevalent. In
particular, many visions of our planet’s future within science fiction writing and
film are set against backdrops of dystopic urban landscapes, which are either
dark and menacing (such as in the film Blade Runner, 1982) or ruined and
abandoned (such as in the film Mad Max, 1979) (Gold 2001). However, despite
these numerous pessimistic visions, not everyone concurs with these nightmare
scenarios and there is also optimism about the urban future. The idea of the city,
and living within one, remains strong; one thing that we can be sure of is that
cities are adaptable to new conditions and circumstances, both global and local
in nature. Of immediate concern is how cities and urban populations can adapt
to address important global concerns such as the use of the world’s resources,
climate change and world poverty and health. These are critical challenges
facing the urban managers of today and tomorrow – we all have our part to play,
perhaps yours will be a key one in the future!
Hopefully, this opening chapter has provided you with a stimulating start to, or
continuation of, your urban geographical journey. There is a great diversity of
cities in the world, which possess both similar and unique characteristics and
12 • Contexts
concerns, and also many ways of looking at the city, both from above and
below, from the official to the personal and from different cultural perspectives.
We would hope that this has raised many questions for you about what is going
on in the urban world, both locally to you and also further afield. The remainder
of this book seeks to help you explore the issues identified in this introduction,
and more, in greater depth, drawing on a wide range of information concerning
cities, both from within urban geography and beyond.
The book is structured around three core sections; Contexts, Themes and
Issues. The first section, of which this introductory chapter forms part, provides
a series of Contexts, or foundations, for the study of urban geography. Also
within this section, chapter two examines some of the significant theoretical
and conceptual issues underpinning urban geographical study, while chapter
three explores the diversity in the structure of the world’s cities and how urban
form varies over time and space. The section on Themes contains four chapters
and examines some of the fundamental processes driving urban growth and
change, which shape both cities and the lives of people within them. Chapter
four examines economic processes, further examining the role of cities within
the changing global economy and the impact that this has had on economic
activities within cities. Chapter five considers politics and urban governance,
examining the variety of ways in which cities are managed around the world
and the balances of power that exist between various groups within cities.
Chapter six develops the examination of city management by looking at the
range of approaches and policies developed to plan the city and create better
urban environments. Finally, in this section, chapter seven explores the social
and cultural heterogeneity of cities and the ways in which this features within
numerous dimensions of urban life. The final section of the book, Issues,
considers some key questions about cities and aspects of urban life:
● Are cities built to be looked at or lived in? (Chapter eight considers the
significance of architecture to the functional and symbolic form of cities and
how this impacts on people’s lives in the city.)
● Are images of cities important? (Chapter nine looks at a variety of
representations of cities and the ways in which they are implemented in
cultural politics and processes of urban development.)
● Are cities experienced as dreams or nightmares? (Chapter ten examines how
we engage with the city in everyday life and whether this is a positive or
negative experience for people.)
● Are cities able to provide a home for everyone? (Chapter eleven explores the
fundamental role of the city as a residential space and considers why many
cities cannot meet the housing needs of their populations.)
● Are cars killing cities? (Chapter twelve considers our mobility in cities and
examines the transportation dilemmas facing many cities in the twenty-first
century.)
An urban world • 13
Follow-up activities
Essay title: ‘What are some of the key issues facing cities around the world in
the twenty-first century?’
An effective answer would outline some of the key urban trends and issues
introduced in this opening chapter and would provide some examples of these
issues from cities around the world drawing on academic research into cities.
It might also look to suggest which of these issues are the most challenging
ones facing cities. An excellent answer would look to move beyond this
extended list and critically explore why these issues face cities and why they
present particular challenges. It would also look to set discussion more widely
within academic writing on the city, evaluating different perspectives, or
lenses, adopted to look at urban issues.
Project idea
Develop the idea of ‘your urban geographies’ evidence can you gather to explore your city
introduced in this chapter. Develop a case (for example, population statistics,
study of the city you live in or a city that is economic data about companies operating
familiar to you, gathering evidence to in your city, field research, writings about
examine this city from the three your city, your own personal experiences)?
perspectives outlined in this chapter: the Evaluate the evidence you gather and think
macro geographies of your city, the about the benefits and problems of using
connectivity of your city and the internal different sources of data and in examining
geographies of your city. What types of the city from a variety of perspectives.
Further reading
Books
● Bell, D. and Jayne, M. (2006) Small Cities: Urban Experience Beyond the
Metropolis, Abingdon: Routledge
Much writing on urban geography and the city more generally tends to focus on
a relatively small number of ‘big’ cities. By contrast this is an interesting
collection of essays focusing on those (smaller) cities and more mundane urban
spaces not normally featured in urban geography’s mainstream literatures.
● Jonas, A.E.G., McCann, E. and Thomas, M. (2015) Urban Geography: A
Critical Introduction, Chichester, Wiley-Blackwell
An urban world • 15
Journal articles
● Derudder, B., Taylor, P., Ni, P., De Vos, A., Hoyler, M., Hanssens, H., Bassens,
D. and Huang, J. (2010) ‘Pathways of change: shifting connectivities in the
world city network, 2000–08’, Urban Studies, 47(9): 1861–1877
Based on GaWC research ideas, the article considers the degree of connectivity
between particular world cities.
● Hewitt, L. and Graham, S. (2015) ‘Vertical cities: representations of urban
verticality in twentieth century science-fiction literature’, Urban Studies,
52(5): 923–937
An interesting recent example of the analysis of the city through its
representation in, in this case, literature. It is also of interest as it reflects the
growing recent interest in the verticality of cities. This is a dimension of cities
which has been somewhat ignored within traditional urban geography compared
to their horizontal development.
● Nijman, J. (2007) ‘Comparative urbanism’, Urban Geography, 28(1): 1–6
A key author in recent debates about the need to extend geographical research to
include more comparative studies, especially concerning cities beyond the
Global North.
● Robinson, J. (2011) ‘Cities in a world of cities: the comparative gesture’,
International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, 35(1): 1–23
A key article which challenges the ‘western’ focus of much urban geographical
writing and theorizing. Robinson’s other writings in this vein, including her 2005
book Ordinary Cities: Between Modernity and Development are also well worth
checking out.
16 • Contexts
Websites
Introduction
Exercise
What do you consider to be the most approaches that geographers have taken to
important ‘basic questions cities pose’ these questions. Think in terms of the
(Paddison 2001: 4)? Before reading on see methods they have employed and any
if you can think of four or five examples. Can evidence of their theoretical stances on
you find examples from the academic these issues. Is this how you would
literature of geographers studying these approach these questions? Can you think of
questions? Try to think about the different alternative approaches?
18 • Contexts
Urban geographers have continually sought to make sense of the city’s internal
structure, to discern order within the seemingly chaotic. The origins of this
impulse can be found in the birth of urban studies at the Department of
Sociology at the University of Chicago, which was founded in 1913. The
theoretical and methodological foundations laid down by pioneering urban
scholars such as Robert Park and Ernest Burgess, among others, have been
fundamental to a wide range of disciplines, including urban geography,
concerned with the city.
Rather than plough through the detail of the successive attempts that geographers
and others have made to understand the structure of cities (for such discussions
please see the suggested reading at the end of the chapter), we simply want to
isolate one dimension that urban scholars have looked at and which would seem
to underpin the internal geographies of cities. This is the operation of power
within the city and its associated processes of competition and conflict. In doing
so we will discuss the different ways in which successive ‘schools’ or paradigms
of urban geography thought about the operation of power in the city and how
this influenced their views of the processes that shaped the internal structure of
Changing approaches • 19
cities. We would not argue that this is the only dimension that one could choose,
but for us it is illustrative of key changes in thinking across the history of urban
geography.
Drawing on ideas from the natural sciences, the Chicago School talked of human
ecology and explored competition between groups of people with differing
abilities to pay economic rent for land. From this they argued that the land use
patterns and patterns of residential segregation reflected equilibria between the
abilities of different groups to pay economic rent, their needs and inter-group
competition. Despite their interest in economic power these researchers were
not blind to culture as a force shaping cities, noting ethnicity and other facets
of lifestyle as a factor producing communities within cities. From this view of
the city as an arena of competition stemmed a number of urban models that
represented the first attempts to systematically understand the structure of the
city and to tie this to underlying causal processes (Pacione 2009). Widely known
and applied models to date from this period included Burgess’ concentric zone
model and Hoyt’s sector model (see Pacione 2001a and chapter three).
In the 1950s and 1960s the social sciences became increasingly concerned
with producing rigorous, statistical explorations of society that pursued a
nomothetic search to unearth regularities, general laws and patterns of human
behaviour. This was facilitated by significant advances in computer technology
and the desire of the social sciences to attain credibility and relevance (Hubbard
2006). This approach was particularly influential in geography that began to
be described as a positivist, spatial science. In urban geography, this partly
took the form of testing the urban models either from the Chicago School or
subsequent ones that were much influenced by their work. Influential work from
this period included explorations of the social areas of cities (Shevky and Bell
1955) and later factorial ecology that sought to identify the socio-economic and
cultural factors that underpinned urban spatial patterns (see Knox and Pinch
2010: 67–73 and chapter eleven).
Despite the undoubted technical sophistication of this work it was subject to a
number of criticisms by the late 1960s. These included criticisms of inherent
flaws, such as its unrealistic views of human beings and their knowledge of the
environment and consequently the poor predictability of urban models (Pacione
2009). However, ultimately more damning were criticisms of spatial science’s
lack of ability to say anything about a number of emerging urban crises linked to
poverty, inequality and conflict in cities of the Global North at the time. Put
simply, positivist urban geography lacked relevance and engagement with the
topical urban issues of the time. Despite the efforts of an influential behavioural
offshoot (see Goodey and Gold 1985; Walmsley and Lewis 1993; Kitchin 1994),
which by drawing on environmental psychology aimed to more accurately
model the processes of human perception and cognition, this particular brand of
urban geography saw its influence wane into the 1970s.
20 • Contexts
Interestingly, while the origins of the Chicago School of urban studies lay in
explorations of one rapidly industrializing city, the origins of the approach that
came to replace spatial science in urban geography can be traced back in part to
Friedrich Engels’ (1844) revelations of the horrors of another, Manchester,
during his time there in the 1840s. This, and Engels’ subsequent work with Karl
Marx, were key influences on the emergence of structuralist approaches across
the social sciences in the early 1970s. Engels, and structuralists more generally,
saw power in rather different terms to the Chicago School and their followers.
Emphasizing inequality and the exploitation of the working class, structuralism
within urban geography focused on class as the key dimension of urban life and
saw social and spatial outcomes as the consequences of structural changes within
the capitalist regime of accumulation (Pacione 2009).
Structuralist, or neo-Marxist, urban geographies then were very different to
the positivist ones that had preceded them. These were urban geographies
underpinned often by a strong normative impulse, a sense of what should be
(Hubbard 2006; Pacione 2009). In some cases, these convictions prompted
researchers to take on activist roles or positions overtly critical of planning and
government policy, which were felt to be instrumental in the maintenance of
unequal class relations and the propping-up of capitalism. Some of the key
works from this period included Social Justice and the City (1973) by David
Harvey (a ‘reformed’ positivist) and The Urban Question (translated into
English in 1977) and The City and the Grassroots (1983) by Manuel Castells.
Many of the key works in this paradigm explored the dynamics of investment in
urban property markets. They interpreted these patterns as attempts to resolve
periodic crises within capitalism, charting the social and economic consequences
of this dynamic through processes such as gentrification (Smith 1996), suburban
development, deindustrialization and urban abandonment. Although subject to a
number of criticisms, often referring to its failure to adequately incorporate
human agency into its analysis (see Savage et al.’s (2003: 52–53) criticisms of
David Harvey for example), it retained a prominence within urban geography
and indeed its influence is still felt today.
An alternative perspective that arose primarily within urban sociology focused
not on power in terms of class positions and conflict but rather in terms of the
ability of key individuals, urban managers and gatekeepers, to control access to
resources in the city (Pacione 2009).
Such actors included housing managers, planners, estate agents, mortgage
lenders, financiers, police, councillors and architects. Collectively and
individually, it was argued these actors could deny certain social groups
access to particular property markets (and hence particular parts of the city).
(Hubbard 2006: 32–33)
Changing approaches • 21
Despite the focus on individual actors their actions tended still to be interpreted
in terms of the maintenance of class relations.
The urban managerialist approach, in emphasizing conflict, racism and
inequalities in wealth and power in less abstract terms than neo-Marxist forms
of structuralism made some important contributions to urban studies (see Pahl
1970; Rex and Moore 1974; Rex and Tomlinson 1979). In highlighting the
barriers to access to resources, such as housing, for many in the city, they
destabilized positivist models of the city in which such constraints were largely
absent (Hubbard 2006) (see also chapter eleven).
The desire to unpack the internal structure of the city remains a strong impulse
within urban geography, with recent contributions including attempts to model
the post-industrial, post-modern or global metropolis (see discussion below and
chapter three). However, work in this vein has tended to shift in one of two
directions, either looking at how specific processes, such as gentrification for
example, play out within cities or, alternatively, adopting more ethnographic
approaches or ones that seek to explore more the meanings of urban spaces
(Pacione 2009). We will look at some of this work later in the chapter and
throughout the book.
As Brian Berry’s (1964) quotation (see p. 18) reminds us, one of the key
interests of urban geographers has been, and remains, the question of the
relationships between cities and wider contexts, however these may be
construed. Although not a central concern of positivist approaches it was
present in their interest in urban systems, for example, Christaller’s central
place theory (Hubbard 2006: 32). However, this dimension of the urban has
been much more a concern of other approaches and is something we have seen
a growing interest in recently. Again, the question of power, in this case the
operation of power upon cities and the power of cities themselves, provides a
useful lens through which to examine the ways in which urban geographers
have approached this in a number of different ways.
A recurrent concern among structuralist urban geographers has been the
impacts of structural changes on cities, the wider context in this case seen as the
capitalist system or the global economy. The city, in being regarded as a crucial
site of the resolution of periodic crises within capitalism, was often considered
as ‘victim’. Work in this vein emphasized the destructive impacts of uneven
development in processes like deindustrialization and urban development.
Later work, however, argued that cities were not as helpless as this view might
suggest and explored the ways in which cities and space were also active in
22 • Contexts
distribution of urban populations towards the Global South (see chapter one).
Not only has urban theory failed, thus far, to respond to these trends but it has
also failed to embrace the diversities of city life globally, remaining too fixated
on a narrow set of social divisions (especially class based divisions) that were
more applicable to cities in a particular place (the Global North) at a particular
time (the twentieth century) than they are to the diversity of cities and urban
lifestyles around the world now.
Robinson is particularly critical of the tendency of urban theory to transfer or
‘universalise’ ‘located and parochial assumptions’ (2005a: 6) from the small
set of cities in which they were devised to other, very different, cities elsewhere.
The effects of this have been either that the assumptions are irrelevant to
the cities to which they have been applied, or, that in not fitting into these
assumptions and models, certain cities are relegated and defined as ‘other’ or
simply seen in terms of under-development or in terms only of what they lack in
relation to other cities. The application of western urban theory then to cities
elsewhere may be disempowering, a tendency regarded as colonial in its effects.
There is a danger then, following this, that this application of urban theory
can create hierarchies, categories and divisions to which cities are consigned.
Much of the impulse behind the emergence of new perspectives and alternative
urban theories is to resist this colonial, disempowering impulse and to
produce urban theories that are able to recognize cities on their own terms and
to accommodate global urban diversity. As Robinson argues: ‘we need a form of
theorising that can be as cosmopolitan as the cities we try to describe’ (2005a: 3).
Hubbard (2006) is similarly critical of urban theory’s attempts to account for
recent trends in urbanization in cities of the west. These cities are being
increasingly affected by a number of economic, political, social and cultural
factors that were neither anticipated nor included in positivist and later
structuralist models and theories of the city and which appear to raise questions
about some key aspects and assumptions of these perspectives. These processes,
often referred to under the banner of post-modern urbanization, have included
deindustrialization, the rise of entrepreneurial forms of urban governance,
increasing levels of social polarization and fragmentation and the reconfiguration
of both individual and group identities in new, multiple and complex ways
through practices such as consumption, migration and leisure that are
increasingly central to the urban experience. They have exposed earlier urban
theory as overly rigid, crude and inflexible. It is not that recent urban theory has
failed to notice these changes. Indeed, there has been much written about them
by many urban geographers and others from cognate disciplines (see Harvey
1989a; Soja 1989, 1996; Davis 1990; Watson and Gibson 1995; Dear and Flusty
2005), a significant proportion of which is based upon analysis of Los Angeles, a
city that has become constructed as the archetypal post-modern city (see also
chapter three). Rather, much of what has been produced has been done from
24 • Contexts
within the theoretical straightjacket of twentieth century urban theory that has
been unable to offer sufficiently cosmopolitan, to use Robinson’s term, urban
theory through which to speak of these changes (Hubbard 2006: 42–55).
Criticisms of these attempts to theorize the post-modern city have included
questions about the representativeness of Los Angeles. As with earlier
manifestations of urban theory we have seen here a tendency to universalize
insights derived from the specific analysis of Los Angeles. Further, these
accounts have been accused of producing top-down perspectives that have
failed to include the grounded multiple realities of the cities under scrutiny
(Ley and Mills 1993). This, it has been argued, is both disempowering and
reductionist, erasing the subtle contours of social difference and experience
within different cities.
Exercise
Look at some of the writing on Los Angeles familiar? How different, and in what ways,
from writers such as Davis, Soja or Dear would our view of post-modern urbanization
and Flusty. How transferable, do you think, be had it been based more extensively
are their views of post-modern urbanization around explorations of cities other than Los
to urban settings with which you are Angeles?
Having read our brief gallop through the history of urban geography you may
be asking, quite rightly, how this is relevant to your own practice as a budding
urban geographer. We want to stress three points here. First, it is important to
reiterate that the urban geography that you will undertake is the product of a
long evolution of theory, methods and concerns. Your urban geographies then
will be shaped by this history. Second, it is important to stress that debate, even
disagreement, is very much alive within urban geography. The gauntlet thrown
Changing approaches • 25
Summary
Follow-up activities
Essay title: ‘We need a form of theorising that can be as cosmopolitan as the
cities we try to describe’ (Robinson 2005a: 3). Discuss Robinson’s challenge to
urban theory and the ways that we might go about constructing an alternative,
‘cosmopolitan’ urban theory.
of this theory and the basis that she proposes for an alternative. An excellent
answer would then move beyond Robinson’s work to consider the work of
others who have proposed alternatives to prevailing forms of urban theory. The
papers by Rao and Wolch in the further reading below would be relevant here
as well as some of the critiques outlined by Hubbard.
Project idea
Further reading
Books
Journal articles
● Ferenčuhová, S. (2016) ‘Accounts from behind the Curtain: history and
geography in the critical analysis of urban theory’, International Journal of
Urban and Regional Research, 40(1): 113–131
Another paper, like many recommended here, which recognizes the limitations of
urban theory and which attempts to ‘decentre’ it. Here the perspective is from
scholars writing about post-Soviet cities. Even if your interest is not specifically
in these cities, it is worth reading for the more general critiques of urban theory
that this perspective highlights.
● Van Meeteren, M., Derudder, B. and Bassens, D. (2016) ‘Can the straw man
speak? An engagement with post-colonial critiques of “global cities research”’,
Dialogues in Human Geography, 6(3): 247–267
A critical review of global cities research from a post-colonial perspective.
● Rao, V. (2006) ‘Slum as theory: the South/Asian city and globalization’,
International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, 30(1): 225–232
An excellent review of recent writing on reimagining urban theory. This, like the
paper by Roy below, is an example of a very highly cited and influential
contribution to recent debates on urban theory. As with much of this recent work,
following the influence of Jennifer Robinson’s work, it asks that we think of
theory beyond purely Western perspectives.
● Robinson, J. (2002) ‘Global and world cities: a view from off the map’,
International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, 26(3): 531–554
An early articulation of some of Robinson’s key challenges to urban theory and
now something of a key paper in enlivening and broadening contemporary
debates around urban theory.
● Roy, A. (2009) ‘The 21st-century metropolis: new geographies of theory’,
Regional Studies, 43(6): 819–830
Calls for a re-examination of urban theory relevant to the twenty-first century
drawing on critical perspectives from the Global South.
3 Urban form and structure
Introduction
Of all the attributes associated with the city, its physical presence exerts a
significant influence on us. The form or shape of the city, known as its
morphology, can be seen as the tangible outcome of a complex mix of socio-
economic forces and the ideas and intentions of groups and individuals acting
both from within and outside a city. In his textbook The Study of Urban
Geography, first published in 1972, Harold Carter located his chapter
considering urban form towards the end of the book, arguing that the reader
needs to have engaged with the rest of the subject matter of urban geographical
study in order to understand the complexity of urban form. Yet, its consideration
at the end, rather than the beginning, of Carter’s book was perhaps also a
reflection of the lack of centrality of studies of urban form to mainstream urban
geography at the time he was writing. Since then, the examination of urban
form has moved more centre stage in urban geographical research, and urban
theory has begun to pay more attention to the ‘materiality’ of the city (Lees
2001; Hubbard 2006). We would therefore contend that consideration of urban
form provides an important introductory context for urban geographical study.
In this chapter we provide a brief introduction to some of the ways in which
geographers have sought to analyse urban form and understand the dynamic
and changing structure of cities over time and space. We begin by examining
the development of ideas associated with urban morphological study. We then
adopt a broadly chronological approach by examining key stages in the
historical development of cities and their form (table 3.1). This broad three-
fold division is a traditional and appealing way of considering the changing
nature of urban form within geography. While this remains a useful starting
framework, it must be remembered that this simple typology is based
principally within western research traditions (see chapter two) and
consequently masks a considerable variety in trajectories of urban
development around the world.
descriptive ‘site and situation’ studies (Carter 1995: 3), concerned primarily
with examining physical characteristics as the determining factor in the location
and development of settlements. Later research not only undertook more
detailed studies of urban forms but also considered the forces creating them.
This urban morphogenetic study developed particularly strongly in German
universities in the early twentieth century, drawing on work by geographers,
historians and architects. The traditions developed here have had a continuing
influence on the development of urban morphological study in many European
countries and in North America through both the spread of ideas and the
movement of key researchers (Whitehand 1987).
A key legacy of this German tradition was the development of approaches to the
study of urban form within geography, principally through the work of M.R.G.
Conzen, who was a student in Germany in the early twentieth century. Conzen
moved to Britain in the 1930s and undertook a number of detailed urban studies
of British towns in the 1950s and 1960s, with his studies of Whitby, Alnwick
30 • Contexts
● Recognition that different elements of the plot (Conzen identified the burgage
the urban landscape change at different cycle as a particular variant expressing a
speeds over time, with the plan more more general phenomenon of gradual
resistant to change than building forms plot infilling – see pre-industrial city
and land uses. Existing forms then section).
provide constraints on subsequent ● Conceptualization of the phases of
development. growth of the city at the macro scale
● Conceptualization of cycles of through the idea of fringe belts – see
development at the micro scale within industrial city section.
Despite this work being well received at the time of publication, Conzen’s ideas
have not been widely utilized until relatively recently. Many studies of urban
form remained essentially descriptive and came in for criticism in the 1960s as
geography moved to embrace scientific and structural approaches. Studies of
urban development and the ‘shape’ of the city became dominated by studies of
function and land use, drawing on the work of the Chicago School (see chapter
two). Here, form and use became conflated and buildings and spaces were
viewed primarily as containers of activities, if they were examined at all.
Consideration of the city as a complex physical entity almost disappeared from
mainstream urban geographical research and urban geography textbooks.
Since the 1980s, there has been a resurgence in studies of urban form
(Whitehand 1992a). The impetus for this resurgence has come from scholars in a
variety of different disciplines around the world, including geography, planning,
architecture, urban design and urban history. Within geography three principal
Urban form and structure • 31
strands of current interest are evident. First, work based on Conzen’s ideas
has continued in Britain (Whitehand 2001) and in the United States (Conzen
2001). Key areas have been development of the fringe belt concept (Whitehand
and Morton 2006), the plan analysis of medieval towns (Lilley 2000) and
examination of agents of urban change (Whitehand 1992b). Second, renewed
interest in culture in geography has focused attention on the symbolic qualities
of the urban landscape (Hubbard 2006). Finally, researchers have become
interested in the emergence of the new urban forms linked to post-modernism
and changes in the dominant forms of architecture in cities (Knox 1993) (see
also chapter eight). This recent research has begun to explore the common ways
in which cities are built and transformed, and has widened research beyond the
traditional areas of study, showing the applicability of many earlier concepts to
modern urban environments and cities beyond Europe (Conzen 2009).
Urban origins
The diversity in the origins of early cities in time and space produced a great
variety in their form. The forms of earliest cities were often intimately linked
to the religious and cultural beliefs of particular societies, providing specific
symbolic links between the population and their wider world view (figure 3.1
and case study on p. 34).
Despite this variety in early urban forms, similarities in the principal functions
and socio-political structure of early cities led Gideon Sjoberg (1960) to propose
a model of the structure of the pre-industrial city (figure 3.2). Within Sjoberg’s
Figure 3.1 Tulum, Mexico, reflecting the religious and cultural beliefs of the Mayan
civilization
Source: Author’s photograph
Figure 3.2 (a) A model of the pre-industrial city, (b) Pre-industrial London
Source: Adapted from Herbert and Thomas (1982: 63)
34 • Contexts
model, prestige buildings, religious complexes and the residences of the social
elite were located in the centre, indicating the pre-eminence of the core and the
greater prominence of these activities over economic concerns. Concentric rings
of decreasing social status span out from the centre. These zones of artisans
and unskilled workers were further differentiated by virtue of occupation or
ethnicity. His model was developed as part of the critical discussions of the
work of the Chicago School and sought to demonstrate that the social structure
proposed for modern cities (see below) was the reverse for pre-industrial cities.
Variations to Sjoberg’s model, such as Vance’s consideration of the mercantile
city (1977), emphasized the importance of occupational sub-districts in pre-
industrial cities based on economic rather than purely religious concerns and
questioned the extent of a zone of lower class labourers, seeing these scattered
throughout the sub-districts.
In common with other well-known urban models, Sjoberg’s is based on
socio-economic structure and does little to illuminate understanding of the
physical structure of pre-industrial cities. As noted above, while the physical
form or ‘look’ of pre-industrial cities was quite specific, related to localized
building traditions, similarities in the functions of early cities produced some
commonalities in the layout and building types contained within them. Early
cities were ‘pedestrian’ cities and therefore relatively compact in size with fairly
narrow streets, reflecting available transport technologies. The plan of pre-
industrial cities is often referred to as ‘organic’ in structure, implying that it is
irregular and ‘natural’ rather than formal and planned. However, the description
of the form of pre-industrial cities as ‘unplanned’ is somewhat false as there is
clear evidence of planning in many early cities, for example in many medieval
European cities (see case study).
continued
From examining textual and visual centuries can be linked to ideas about
representations of the medieval city he beauty and design being associated with
argues that the city was viewed as a divine design of the world and straight lines
scaled-down version of the world, or offering a path to God. Indeed God himself
microcosm, standing as a ‘map’ of Christian was widely depicted as a geometer,
belief and meaning. The city literally and designing the cosmos, and many surveyors
mystically stood between ‘man’ (sic) and of the time were seen to be engaged in
God, connecting the earthly and heavenly inscribing Christian values into urban
worlds in writings of the time. Evidence of landscapes. This Christian symbolism was
the increasing use of geometry in the further inscribed into the urban life of the
planning of cities highlights how cosmic medieval city and communicated to urban
symbolism was materially expressed in the populations more widely through religious
layout and physical form of medieval urban processions which often went from the
landscapes, particularly through the use of periphery of the city to the main religious
urban forms based on the circle and the building at the centre, so symbolizing the
square, quartered to make the sign of the route to God and the centrality of God within
cross, reflecting the idealized symbolic form the city and also the wider Christian world.
of Jerusalem. Equally, the straightening up Source: Lilley (2004)
of urban layouts in the twelfth and thirteenth
In line with their defensive and control functions cities were often surrounded
by fortifications, particularly walls. These walls acted as important barriers to
outward expansion (Conzen 1960), creating a densely packed plan form as
building was contained within this boundary. This densely packed structure is also
evident in the multiple use of plots and buildings in the pre-industrial city for both
commercial and residential purposes. Conzen’s (1960) examination of burgage
plots in Alnwick reveals a typical structure where homes, workshops and storage
areas were combined in a single plot, which over time was increasingly infilled
with buildings due to development pressures. Cities also acted as trading centres,
containing spaces for the exchange, storage and processing of goods. In particular,
cities contained places for the exchange of goods in the form of market places or
shop or craft streets, usually at the core of the city. Sometimes these were zones
where all trading took place, while in larger centres a number of distinctive
market places or craft zones were evident, dealing with trade in particular goods,
such as livestock or crops (see the example of London, figure 3.2).
While these generalized forms can be identified in many cities with pre-
industrial origins, it should be noted that differences in religious codes and the
organization of social relations produce some distinctive form variants. For
example, in traditional Islamic cities, the site of the main mosque has an
important influence on urban form, while extended family living arrangements
and ideas about the distinction of public and private domestic space produce
distinctive layouts in residential districts (Bianca 2000). Equally, the alignment
36 • Contexts
Exercise
Consider the origins and early development Review the information you collect and
of the city you live in, or a city close to where consider whether your city has pre-industrial
you live. Try to discover what information origins, the nature of its pre-industrial form
exists on the early development of your and if so whether any urban forms from that
chosen city, such as old maps, historical period survive into the present layout of the
documents and texts or archaeological city. If they do not, or the forms are different
evidence. Good places to begin your search from those discussed above, then think
would be your university or college library, about why this is (what are the origins of
local libraries or archives or on-line your city and the processes underpinning
information sources such as local government its development)? Think also about the
or history group websites. The more sources problems and limitations involved in
you find the more comprehensive an account gathering information about the early
of your chosen city’s development you can development of cities.
produce (you might try this as a group activity
with other people in your class).
In parallel to the development of the first cities, the rise of the modern cities
that we know today was precipitated by two further significant phases in the
development of human history, namely industrialization and colonialism.
The complex series of innovations and period of economic and technological
change that has become commonly referred to as the Industrial Revolution
had a profound effect on urban development particularly in Europe and North
America from the eighteenth century onwards. Many pre-industrial cities
increased significantly in size and had their form altered by redevelopment and
the addition of new urban forms associated with new economic and socio-
cultural impulses. In addition, many new urban centres emerged based on the
exploitation of new resources, such as coal, new transportation links, such as
railways, and new industries.
In parallel to industrialization a number of European countries embarked on a
period of global exploration and colonization. This was led by countries such as
Spain, Portugal, the Netherlands and Britain from the fifteenth century onwards.
Initial quests for trade routes developed into the claiming and settlement of land
on the continents of North and South America, Africa and Asia. This resulted in
the export of European ideas of city building to the ‘New World’, although
Urban form and structure • 37
traffic was not all one way and some design ideas from colonized countries also
filtered back into European cities (King 1990).
Many new cities were founded to act as political centres for colonial control and
as centres for colonial trade. Where existing cities were utilized, separate
colonial extensions were often added to existing indigenous urban forms.
The rise of the industrial city stimulated much research into these new and
changing cities. As noted in chapter two, the work of urban sociologists at the
University of Chicago was particularly influential. Chicago was a fairly new
city at the time; it had grown rapidly in the late nineteenth century, owing much
of this growth to industrialization, its emerging role as a railway hub and large
scale in-migration. Classical models of modern urban structure, namely
Burgess’ concentric zone model (1925) and Hoyt’s sector model (1939) were
based on this research (figure 3.3).
For Burgess, the city was a ‘social organism’ and he used the ecological analogy
of invasion and succession to conceptualize the process of suburbanization. In his
model, recent migrants to the city would lack money and would seek out
the cheapest accommodation in the city, namely older housing in the inner city.
As these migrants became wealthier and able to make wider housing choices,
they would move out to the next zone of more expensive housing. Thus social
status and wealth increased towards the edge of the settlement, with the best
housing and wealthiest groups on the edge of the city. The model also identified
a central business district, where commercial functions dominated, and a
transitional zone, where industry mixed with poor housing. The model therefore
identifies the increasing functional segregation of the industrial city, with an
increasing separation of home and work. Hoyt’s model was based on urban land
economics. He disputed the notion of a concentric zonal structure for the
industrial city and argued that residential areas could be more properly understood
as a pattern of sectors. He identified a sectoral pattern of high rent areas and
suggested that high status sectors could be found along routes radiating out from
the centre and away from industrial zones. However, his model also includes an
element of filtering, with wealthier residents moving out from the centre.
Subsequent ‘testing’ of these models has revealed the complexity of urban
socio-economic structure and the range of factors influencing this. An important
early variation to Burgess and Hoyt’s models was the proposal of a multiple
nuclei model by Harris and Ullman (1945). Here they argued that cities rarely
develop around a single nucleus and that a range of local conditions were
important to the location and clustering of various land uses. Other important
38 • Contexts
variations were identified in industrial cities where capitalist and free market
conditions had not been given an unfettered rein. In the UK, analysis of British
cities revealed a more complex pattern of zones and sectors, exemplified by
Mann’s (1965) model (figure 3.3), with lower status local authority housing on
the edge of cities, a result of state intervention in the housing market from the
early twentieth century onwards. Intervention by the state also gave rise to very
different forms in cities developed under communism in Eastern Europe and
China. Some Soviet cities displayed a distinctive ‘camel back’ structure with a
high density core, surrounded by a low density industrial zone, with high rise
housing projects on the periphery (Pacione 2009: 184). However, many cities in
communist countries were only partial examples of this ‘idealized’ form and
with the collapse of centrally controlled land markets many have become more
like European modern cities (Rudolph and Brade 2005).
Again, while useful, these classical urban models only provide a partial insight
into the form of the industrial city, based as they are on considerations of socio-
economic structure alone. They provide no indication of the physical forms
associated with the dynamic growth and change of the industrial city. Work by
urban morphologists has sought to provide more insight into the macro scale form
of the industrial city resulting from its outward expansion, using the fringe belt
concept which links the long-term development of urban areas to economic
fluctuations, the role of innovation and cycles of building in particular (Whitehand
and Morton 2006). Morphological research has demonstrated that while the
physical expansion of the industrial city has been successively outward, the phases
of development have not been uniformly smooth. Urban expansion is rarely
continuous, but rather cyclical with periods of rapid outward growth alternating
with periods of standstill. These periods of stability, or limited movement, have
produced fixation lines either in the form of a physical barrier, such as the town
wall in the pre-industrial city, or a metaphorical barrier resulting from a lack of
economic dynamism. On the edge of the city, during these slumps, land is
cheaper and more available and it becomes feasible to build at lower densities,
including houses on large plots, large institutional buildings, such as hospitals or
universities, large commercial complexes, such as industrial and retail parks,
and to include extensive land uses such as sports pitches. This leads to a belt of
land, or fringe belt, which has a different more open form to those areas of more
intensive development either side of the belt. Larger cities can contain a number
of fringe belts, with the plan and functions of the inner and middle belts becoming
fixed as the next building boom moves the city beyond them (see figure 3.4 and
case study below). Recent comparative research has demonstrated the general
applicability of the fringe belt concept, using research in a number of cities to
demonstrate their existence in urban areas around the world (Conzen 2009).
Much of the outward expansion of the industrial city consisted of residential
development, and a key feature of the industrial city is the series of distinct
40 • Contexts
Growth
sustained Motor Motor Walking
by: car bus &tram
Inner
FRINGE BELT
Middle
FRINGE BELT
Outer
FRINGE BELT
Drawing on research into the early twentieth Previously, research had suggested that
century fringe belt in Birmingham, UK, fringe belts were most vulnerable to
Whitehand and Morton’s (2006) article redevelopment as they became embedded
examines the pressures on these distinctive in the built-up area, thereafter becoming
areas, particularly their green open space, less susceptible to such redevelopment as
resulting from recent socio-economic institutions occupying fringe belts invested
change. The fringe belt examined in in their estate and became established,
Birmingham marks the edge of the city as deflecting other land use pressures.
it existed at the time of a major hiatus in However, recent socio-economic and
housebuilding just before, during and just political changes in the UK have led to
after the First World War (1914–1918). renewed pressures for the redevelopment of
This fringe belt was heterogeneous in plan, these areas. Examination of development
building form and land use, containing a control records for a selection of case study
range of extensive land users including sites within the fringe belt suggested that
institutions, public utilities, allotment since the 1960s there had been substantial
gardens, parks, recreational areas and pressure for redevelopment for both housing
some industry. Like other fringe belts its and other purposes within the area. The
ground plan characteristics differentiate it research also suggests that negotiation of
from the housing areas on either side of it. this pressure became increasingly
Urban form and structure • 41
continued
contentious and protracted within the among landowners, both commercial estates
planning process. and charitable organizations, to promote
more commercial redevelopment of their land
Key pressures have been the increasing
holdings. While the research also reveals
encouragement from central government
increasing consideration of environmental
for the building of more dwellings within
matters in planning discussions, these only
urban areas on previously developed,
occasionally outweighed commercial
or ‘brownfield’, land and the growing
development considerations. However,
commercialization of public services, such as
despite these considerable pressures the
higher education, health and leisure, many of
fringe belt that came into existence over a
which are strongly represented in fringe
century ago has remained substantially intact
belts. Despite growing concern for the
and continues to be an enduring urban
protection of green spaces in urban areas,
landscape feature. Overall, the research
ambiguity in the definition of what counts as
highlights the often conflicting goals of higher
brownfield land has led to increasing
density development and environmental
pressures to redevelop the open land in
conservation within planning as they are
fringe belt areas and intensify its use,
played out in these distinctive fringe belt
particularly for housing. The detailed case
zones.
study research reveals a changing attitude
Source: Whitehand and Morton (2006)
Exercise
A useful web resource for students compare the layouts of the suburban
interested in examining the form of cities is residential districts. Can you recognize the
Google Earth (www.google.co.uk/intl/en_uk/ different forms, linked to different periods of
earth/index.html). Using images from suburban growth discussed in this chapter?
satellite photographs it allows you to zoom Can you see any fringe belt areas (areas
in on particular cities or areas of cities with more open land/green space)?
(although global coverage is variable) and Compare your findings with the points
look at the configuration of streets, buildings discussed in this chapter – do your city’s
and open spaces in the city. Additionally, its suburban areas appear similar to or different
street view function allows you to look at from the form of the modern city outlined in
some streetscapes from ground level. this chapter? If any differences do exist
think why this might be (for example,
Using Google Earth look at the city that you
different timings of suburban processes or
live in or a city close to where you live.
cultural differences).
Focus in on particular parts of the city and
As noted above, the urban systems of many places beyond Europe were
influenced by successive phases of colonial expansion by a number of European
countries. The specific impact on the form of settlements in those countries
colonized by European nations depended on the timing of colonization and the
country doing the colonizing. In many cases colonizers founded new settlements
to act as control points for trade and rule, exporting certain building traditions
from their own countries. For these settlements a grid plan layout was the
norm, for ease of land allocation and development, occasionally modified by
local topography. These new settlements and systems of control led to the
abandonment of indigenous cities, as in Latin America (see figure 3.1 above),
and only occasionally were existing settlement sites utilized, as in Mexico
City where the Spanish colonial city supplanted the indigenous city (Massey
et al. 1999). In other instances, colonizers built new accommodation alongside
indigenous settlements, seeking to retain a distance between populations,
which led to the juxtaposition of different urban forms, sometimes referred
to as a ‘dual city’. For example in North Africa, French colonial settlements,
containing commercial functions, government buildings and residences, were
built alongside the existing Islamic medinas (figures 3.5a and 3.5b). Similar dual
city forms are also evident in countries influenced by British colonization, such
as India, where cities such as Delhi and Kolkata contain an indigenous city
alongside a British built ‘new town’ inspired by the Garden City idea (Drakakis-
Smith 2000). However, as Drakakis-Smith notes, the idea of a distinct dualism
is too simplistic and in reality hybrid zones of indigenous and colonial forms
exist. Allied to this, it should be noted that often the architecture of buildings
involved a fusion of indigenous and colonial traditions (figures 3.5a and 3.5b).
As former colonies have moved into post-colonial independence, their cities
have been shaped by two key processes linked to their colonial pasts. First,
for many cities, the immediate post-colonial period has been driven by a
desire to ‘modernize’ unfettered by colonial restrictions. Many places sought
to develop their economies to incorporate new industrial and commercial
functions, adding many of the forms of the industrial cities of Europe and
North America to their landscapes, such as high-rise CBD office districts
and factory areas. This has led some commentators to suggest that we are
witnessing a period of urban convergence, where urban environments around
44 • Contexts
Figure 3.5 The dual city, juxtaposing the traditional Islamic medina (left) and colonial
extension (above), Sfax Tunisia
Source: Author’s photographs
the world are becoming increasingly similar and ‘placeless’ (Brenner and Keil
2006), although others argue that much variety still remains (Grant and Nijman
2002). Second, many post-colonial cities have developed socio-economic
structures that are different from western industrial cities. Key features of the
‘classic’ socio-economic models of the so-called ‘Third World city’ are the
presence of large areas of low status squatter settlement housing on the edges
of the city, with higher status enclaves remaining in the core of the city, often
now gated residential developments (Pacione 2009). This structure mirrors the
structure of the pre-industrial city rather than the suburban structures of the
industrial city. This division stems from the stark socio-economic inequalities
in these urban populations, high rates of immigration into these primate
urban centres from poorer rural hinterlands and the lack of housing provision
in economies that are still relatively poor in global terms, frequently still in
dependent relationships with the major post-industrial economies.
A great deal has been written about the apparent transformation of the form of
cities in Europe and North America at the turn of the twenty-first century. This
Urban form and structure • 45
Figure 3.6 The post-modern city (after Dear and Flusty 1998)
Source: Hubbard (2006: 55)
Summary
This chapter has sought to provide a brief overview of the varied forms that cities
have taken over time, linked to key phases in the development of human society.
Examining the physical form of the cities around you, either through the study of
maps and documents or through direct field observations, provides an important
foundation for further research. The key is to move beyond this observation and
description to examine the reasons behind the forms identified. Many of the
ideas about urban form introduced here provide a foundation for more detailed
consideration of the key processes shaping the city, such as economic change and
planning, and key elements of the city’s structure, such as architecture and
housing, later in the book. Why our cities look the way they do and what they
might look like in the future remain important concerns for urban study.
Follow-up activities
Essay title: ‘In what ways can the study of urban form help explain the dynamic
and changing nature of urbanization?’
An effective answer would outline what constitutes urban form and highlight the
link between urban form and the socio-economic and cultural forces shaping the
city. It would perhaps utilize the three-phase model of urbanization outlined at
the beginning of the chapter and examine how particular models of the city
reflect key phases in the development of cities. It would also highlight the
dynamic nature of urban change, exemplified in plot change and redevelopment
and the presence of fringe belts, pointing out that changes in urban forms are
variable, with the plan being the most persistent legacy. An excellent answer
would develop this discussion by pointing to the significance of local forces and
the actions and intentions of a variety of actors in mediating these broader
processes. Drawing on recent critical work in urban geography it would seek to
question the general applicability of urban models and general theories
considering urban form, pointing to the diversity of forms around the world.
Project idea
A traditional activity for urban geographers examine how these vary across the city by
examining the form of the city is to go out undertaking a transect. On a map of your
and look at urban landscapes and to city, or a city that is local to you, set out a
50 • Contexts
continued
transect line to follow, such as along a your city produce two annotated maps of
major route, out from the centre of your city your transect showing changes in building
to the suburban edge. In the field follow form and land use. Examine the variations
your transect, mapping the forms of the in form and land use from the city centre
buildings around you in major zones and compare your findings with the
(height, types, materials, approximate theoretical patterns described in this
general age) and the predominant land chapter. How would you account for any
uses. Following your fieldwork, come back variations between these theoretical ideas
and on a base map of the plan layout of and your observations?
Further reading
Books
● Graham, S. (2016) Vertical: The City from Satellites to Bunkers, London: Verso
Not about urban form per se, this intriguing book asks us to look at the city in three
dimensions and the increasing emphasis on verticality in terms of its organization.
● Kropf, K. (2016) The Handbook of Urban Morphology, London: John Wiley & Sons
Intended as a practical manual of urban morphological analysis, including a
guide to methods of analysis and key terms and concepts.
● Larkham, P.J. and Conzen, M.P. (eds) (2014) Shapers of Urban Form:
Explorations in Morphological Agency, New York: Routledge
A range of disciplinary and geographically focused contributions considering
the dynamics of urban change and the processes and agents responsible for this.
Dedicated to Whitehand, it provides an update on his classic text, The Making
of the Urban Landscape.
● Lilley, K.D. (2009) City and Cosmos: The Medieval World in Urban Form,
London: Reaktion Books
An innovative and interdisciplinary look at the form of early cities and how
Medieval Christians infused their urban surroundings with meaning.
● Oliveira, V. (2016) Urban Morphology: An Introduction to the Study of the
Physical Form of Cities, Cham, Switzerland: Springer
Recent comprehensive text considering the development of urban morphology as
a discipline and outlining key concepts, theories and methods in urban
morphology with detailed case studies of New York, Marrakesh and Porto.
● Vaughan, L. (ed.) (2015) Suburban Urbanities: Suburbs and the Life of the High
Street, London: UCL Press
A collection of chapters looking at suburbs, anchored in the space syntax
morphological approach but spanning a range of disciplinary perspectives and
geographical horizons.
Urban form and structure • 51
Journals
● Barau, A.S., Maconachie, R., Ludin, A.N.M. and Abdulhamid, A. (2015) ‘Urban
morphology dynamics and environmental change in Kano, Nigeria’, Land Use
Policy 42, 307–317
Linking together analysis of human and natural systems, the paper considers the
impact of the changing morphology of the city in terms of its resilience and
sustainability.
● Conzen, M.P., Whitehand, J.W.R. and Gu, K. (2012) ‘Comparing traditional urban
form in China and Europe: a fringe-belt approach’, Urban Geography, 33(1): 22–45
Useful paper demonstrating the cross-cultural application of the fringe-belt
concept as a frame of reference for examining the physical structure and
historical development of cities.
● Meyer, W.B. and Esposito, C.R. (2015) ‘Burgess and Hoyt in Los Angeles:
testing the Chicago models on an automobile age American City’, Urban
Geography, 36(2): 314–325
Interesting paper that tests the applicability of using the ‘Chicago model’ to
study contemporary US cities such as Los Angeles, and argues that this model
remains applicable to studying urban change in the newer, automobile-age city.
● Sassen, S. (2008) ‘Reassembling the urban’, Urban Geography, 29(2): 113–126
A critical discussion of the debates surrounding the differences between urban
models based on Chicago and Los Angeles, part of a special edition of the
journal on this theme.
● Xie, P.F. and Gu, K. (2015) ‘The changing urban morphology: waterfront
redevelopment and event tourism in New Zealand’, Tourism Management
Perspectives, 15: 105–114
The paper considers the changing morphology of Auckland’s waterfront
landscape and the role of regeneration strategies and event tourism as drivers
of change of these areas into ‘post-modern’ urban landscapes.
Websites
Introduction
Neo-classical economics
Economic explorations of the city assumed a prominence during the
quantitative revolution in geography in the 1960s (see chapter two).
Geographers began to utilize neo-classical economic locational theories,
adapting and reworking classical land use models, such as those developed
by Von Thunen, Christaller, Weber and Losch. Two key strands of research
emerged from this: work on urban hierarchies and spheres of influence and
work concerned with the distribution of urban land uses (see Carter 1995 for a
good overview of this research).
56 • Themes
Structuralist approaches
As we noted in chapter two, structuralist approaches have had a profound
impact on urban geography. In seeking to understand the fundamental global
City economies • 57
without its caveats (see Castree and Gregory (2006) for a critical overview of
Harvey’s work), Harvey’s conception of capital switching between investment
opportunities in different economic sectors and geographical locations has
provided an important insight into the changing economic fortunes of cities.
Physically, the switching of capital is manifest in cyclical patterns of urban
growth both within and between cities, with built environments becoming
abandoned in the wake of capital movement to more profitable opportunities
elsewhere. For Harvey, this idea of capital switching could therefore be utilized
both to explore intra-urban changes to the built environment and to understand
regional and international patterns of uneven development as the product of the
global capitalist economy.
While overt reference to Marxist analysis has all but disappeared from many
core economic geography texts (see for example Dicken 2007 and Knox et al.
2008), many of the core ideas and key terms adopted by this work have
continued to be employed in analyses of economic change. One reason for
declining interest in a Marxist take on urban economic change was a feeling
that, as a theory based on analysis of industrial capitalism, it lacked relevance
in explaining urban changes associated with post-modernism and post-
industrialization. However, Harvey (1989a) in his book The Condition of
Postmodernity responded to this challenge by arguing that post-modernism
represented a reordering of, rather than a break from, previous manifestations
of capitalism. This argument was important in reinvigorating critical urban
analysis which has sought to examine the impacts of current shifts to advanced
capitalism and the consequences of increasing economic globalization for cities
(Brenner and Keil 2006).
Drawing on a range of post-modern approaches, more recent research in
urban geography has adopted a pluralistic analytical perspective to examining
restructuring, questioning the economic determinism of earlier structuralist
perspectives (Fyfe and Kenny 2005: 107). For many, while structuralist
analyses provided broad insights into economic change within and between
cities, the operation of economic structures alone could not be simply linked
to particular spatial outcomes. Those critical of prioritizing economic
interpretations of the city have pointed to the importance of recognizing the
embeddedness of capitalist economic processes within specific societies with
particular traditions and histories, which are central to the functioning of the
market and which vary over time and space. Consequently, while there is some
agreement among urban geographers over the broad nature of restructuring and
the reconfigurations of urban space taking place in the twenty-first century city,
there is disagreement over the relative importance of economic, socio-cultural
and political processes in explaining this restructuring, and increasing
recognition of the ways in which global economic forces are mediated by local
factors, such as the nature of local urban governments, economies and cultures,
60 • Themes
In his seminal work on global economic change, Global Shift, first published in
1986 and now in its seventh edition, Peter Dicken notes that the world
economic map has undergone significant shifts in the last fifty years. The end of
the post-Second World War industrial boom in the early 1970s signalled a crisis
for industrial capitalism, with falling profitability in a number of economic
sectors, precipitated by a range of factors including rising oil prices, increasing
inflation, international monetary instability, falling investment values and
increasing labour and production costs for firms. Central to responses to this
economic crisis was the restructuring of existing business operations to
maintain profitability by reducing costs, involving both the reorganization
of industrial processes and the relocation of business operations, and a switch
to investment in newly emerging economic sectors. In particular, production
processes based on Fordist mass production ideas gave way to post-Fordist
modes of industrial organisation (Dicken 2007).
City economies • 61
Table 4.1 A simple model of TNC business operations (after Short 1996: 83)
What have emerged from these changes are intricate production networks
controlled by large complex firms which operate in multiple locations,
increasingly internationally, commonly referred to as trans-national
corporations (TNCs). Significantly, innovations in transport and
communications have enabled TNCs to become more spatially dispersed,
locating different parts of their operations in the most economically
advantageous locations. Typically, this has produced a division between the
location of headquarters and research and development functions, which
have remained within the world’s wealthiest economies, and the location
of routine manufacturing, which follows the availability of cheap labour
around the globe (see table 4.1).
The operation and structure of these TNCs has been seen to have led to global
shifts in manufacturing and also service employment, which have created a
new international division of labour (NIDL) in which more routine business
operations are carried out in the global economic periphery (Bryson 2007; Knox
et al. 2008). These shifts are seen to account for a number of major, worldwide
urban economic changes. These include the deindustrialization of cities in
the Global North, the growth of cities in newly industrializing countries
in the Global South and the growth of global cities as the control and command
centres of an interconnected world economy (see below).
62 • Themes
Another key factor in the emergence of a new urban order associated with the
transition to advanced capitalism has been the growth of new economic sectors
as key drivers of global economic development. As we have already noted,
capitalist growth and development is cyclical in nature. Over long periods of
time, the world economy has been seen to change in a series of cycles or waves
of growth and stagnation. Of about fifty years’ duration, these are known as
Kondratiev waves. They are associated with phases of significant technological
innovation, which are linked to other innovations in production, distribution
and organization and which then spread through the economy (Dicken 2007;
Knox et al. 2008). The first Kondratiev wave was associated with the original
Industrial Revolution (linked to the mechanization of textile production and
improved iron production). The current period of global economic change is
associated with the end of the fourth Kondratiev wave – associated with Fordist
mass production and based principally on the vehicle, consumer durable and
petrochemical sectors – and the early stages of the fifth. The fifth Kondratiev
cycle is associated with post-Fordist flexible production based principally on
micro-electronics, digital technologies, robotics, biotechnologies and the
knowledge, creative and service sectors (Dicken 2007).
Of key significance is that these cycles do not just involve technological
changes but are also associated with particular forms of industrial organization
and have a specific geography as technological leadership changes between
places. It seems that each wave displays its own distinct urban geography,
being largely associated with different types of city to the previous one. In
effect, ‘the locus of the leading edge innovative industries has switched from
region to region, from city to city’ (Hall and Preston 1988: 6, cited in Dicken
2007: 77). While the locus of innovation during the fifth Kondratiev wave has
remained broadly within the advanced industrial economies of the world, the
places within these economies that have benefited from the emergence of
these new sectors are different to those associated with the previous wave. In
particular, smaller cities, linked to educational and research establishments, or
associated with cultural innovation or within amenity and environmentally rich
areas (so-called ‘sun belt’ areas) have benefited from the emergence of these
new industrial spaces (see below).
Economic globalization
The final process shaping the emergence of a new urban order is globalization.
Globalization is a term that is all around us, commonly used in both academic
and popular discussions of contemporary change. Short and Kim (1999: 3)
City economies • 63
argue that it is the new ‘big story’ for the twenty-first century, eclipsing
discussions about Marxism and modernism that dominated the previous
century. However, globalization is not a single entity, but is a term describing a
complex of linked processes which are leading to increasing interconnectedness
in the world and to an intensification in the speed and depth of economic,
cultural and political relations (Murray 2006). While there are a number of
forces underpinning globalization, the dominant force is generally regarded
as economic (Dicken 2007). There has been an increasing globalization of
production, consumption and exchange relations which has transformed a
‘world economy’, based on trade between firms in different nation states, into
what can be viewed as a truly global economy which works as a unit in real
time on a planetary scale (Pacione 2009). In particular, increasing economic
globalization is evident in the hyper-transferability of capital across national
boundaries. Recent financial crises, the repercussions of which have seemingly
spread rapidly around the world, have alerted us to the increasing volume and
speed of financial flows which are a very visible and important indicator of
increasing globalization (Short and Kim 1999; Dicken 2007). The economic
fortunes of individual cities are therefore becoming less autonomous and are
increasingly bound up with the economic fortunes of other urban areas and with
processes operating at wider geographical scales.
This increasing global economic interdependence is the result of a number of
related processes, specifically the emergence of TNCs as key shapers of
economic flows, as noted above; the deregulation of national financial markets;
and telecommunications advances ‘gluing’ together spaces and creating the
‘space of flows’ between points in the global economy. While these three factors
have, on the one hand, led to the incorporation of more and more places into the
capitalist global economy, through the wider dispersal of production activities,
they have also precipitated the counter tendency of increasing centralization of
the command and control functions of this global economy. As the global
replaces the national as the significant level for understanding general economic
trends, the role of cities as the hubs through which this global economy
functions has come under close scrutiny. Commentators have highlighted the
emergence of a network of world cities which are critical to the control and
reproduction of global capitalism (Brenner and Keil 2006).
At the heart of these contradictions of dispersal and concentration in the global
economy have been technological advances in travel and communication. We
live in an era of time-space compression characterized by a speeding up of
communication and rapid circulation of data, knowledge and ideas (Murray
2006). In particular, advances in telecommunications – telephone, e-mail,
computer networks and the internet – have reduced or eliminated time delays
in communication between distant places and increased the sophistication
of exchange available. Consequently, space should matter less and many
64 • Themes
Research by Baum et al. (2004) examines computer and Internet usage. However,
the idea of a growing digital divide, whereby patterns of usage are more variable when
urban societies are being divided into considering family and ethnic status, with
information rich and information poor traditional and non-traditional family status
sectors. Their paper focuses on the areas, and English speaking background
existence of a digital divide across the and non-English speaking background areas,
Sydney metropolitan area, which here is displaying both high and low usage, with
used to signify the gap between those who levels of usage determined by the
have access to ICT technology and those combination of these characteristics with
who do not. Key issues determining use of income. Patterns of high and low home
computers and the Internet are computer and Internet usage are therefore
socioeconomic and demographic factors, geographically dispersed, and are linked to
such as income, age, educational the way in which the spatial social structure
attainment and ethnicity, and the availability of Sydney has developed over time. This
of infrastructure, particularly access to spatial clustering of information poor groups
broadband services. The research is based has implications for policy and access to
on an analysis of computer and Internet use infrastructure and services, where a
by households across Sydney, employing a deepening digital divide could compound the
factorial ecology analysis using census data. social disadvantage already associated with
residential location. Given the spatial as
While Sydney is generally seen to be a
well as socio-economic variables associated
‘wired city’ that is information rich, this is
with computer and internet use, the authors
based on aggregate level data which
conclude by raising the question of whether
misrepresents the true picture whereby
place based or people based programmes
some communities are information rich
should be employed in tackling digital
while others are forming an information
disadvantage within cities.
underclass. Unsurprisingly, there is a
Source: Baum, Van Gellecum and
general pattern whereby high socioeconomic Yigitcanlar (2004)
status is associated with high home
City economies • 65
These criteria were further developed by Saskia Sassen (2002) who refined
earlier definitions by arguing that it was the presence of the headquarters of
financial institutions and advanced producer service companies which was
central to the definition of globally powerful cities. One thing all these firms
share is a dependence on specialist knowledge and personnel and therefore they
are embedded in knowledge rich environments, which are provided in world
cities. As Brenner and Keil (2006: 75) note:
according to Sassen, this newly consolidated producer and financial services
‘complex’ represents the real economic foundation of global cities, because
it provides transnational corporations with a host of essential services
that enable them to implement, manage and regulate their production and
investment networks on a global scale.
Identification of key criteria defining global cities has spawned a wide range of
attributional research which has sought to identify global urban hierarchies.
While this research is quite varied, most studies identify three cities at the top of
the global hierarchy – London, New York and Tokyo – which are often referred
to as the ‘global triad’ (Short and Kim 1999). They are the principal nodes of a
global circuit of information, capital and investment flows and represent centres
of global power. Crucially, these centres are key nodes in the global financial
market and contain key banks and stock exchanges, are centres for major,
advanced producer service companies and are global transport hubs, particularly
City economies • 67
with regard to air transport. There is, however, little consensus in the research
literature about which cities should be included in the next tier (Short and Kim
1999). The second tier broadly consists of major regional centres in key global
arenas, such as Los Angeles in North America, Paris and Frankfurt in Europe
and Osaka and Singapore in Asia. Cities in this tier compete for dominance in
economic terms and in some cases edge close to the global triad in influence and
power. Below this a third and fourth tier are usually identified, which consist of
major cities of lesser global economic importance, and nationally important cities
with some strong international links, respectively (Pacione 2009). Knox (1995)
adds a fifth tier where local leadership has sought to develop distinctive niches in
the global market place. A desire to boost their global standing has led some city
administrations to promote particular developments and initiatives which seek to
enhance their world city attributes (see also chapters six and nine). These cities
are described in the literature as ‘wannabe’ world cities. Taylor (2004) identifies
two types of wannabe city; inner wannabes, those cities which seek to change
existing global hierarchies and to come out of the shadow of a dominant world
city in their region, and outer wannabes, those traditionally defined as Third
World cities which seek to develop their economies and to enter the world
economy.
Short and Kim (1999) provide a useful overview of research in this attributional
tradition and also offer their own analysis of global hierarchies and world city
status based on some of the principal indicators that have been used in previous
analyses, specifically command functions (utilizing data on the location of the
headquarters of the global top 500 industrial and service firms as an indication
of economic decision making power), financial markets (using data on the
location of the headquarters of the world’s top 100 banks and the value and
number of listed companies of major stock markets) and producer services
(using data on the location of the headquarters of major firms in key sectors
such as advertising, law and accountancy). While their consideration of financial
status broadly identifies Tokyo, New York and London at the top of the
hierarchy, their examination of change over time reveals a more complex and
dynamic picture of global influence. While the stock markets of the global triad
dominate, these three plus Paris, Frankfurt, Osaka and Beijing emerge as key
global banking centres. Interestingly, over time the relative position of London
and New York as key centres declines while the position of the other centres
strengthens. Short and Kim’s (1999) consideration of advanced producer
services reveals the wider complexity of this type of analysis of world cities,
highlighting differing patterns of influence depending on the firms selected for
analysis and the sectors looked at. Their analysis of advertising firms highlights
the dominance of New York and Tokyo at the top of the world rankings, but a
more complex regional structuring in the second tier. Finally, their consideration
of telecommunications reveals the limits to this type of analysis, specifically the
68 • Themes
Exercise
Look at the Fortune data from the top 500 consider the types of company that make
global firms: (http://money.cnn.com/ up the top 500 – are they concentrated into
magazines/fortune/global500) – this is particular economic sectors? Think about
published annually. Review this data by the criteria used by Fortune in compiling
location and consider which cities emerge their list of companies – can you think of
as the main locations for the top any assumptions that underpin these
500 companies. Look at the data for other criteria and can you think of any alternative
years – has the pattern of company criteria? What differences in patterns might
headquarters shifted over time? Also emerge?
(1996: 415). Castells’ ideas have influenced the work of Peter Taylor and others
who are part of the Global and World Cities (GaWC) research network based at
Loughborough University in the United Kingdom (see www.lboro.ac.uk/gawc).
Much of the initial research by members of this centre has focused on the
measurement of economic linkages between world cities, particularly focusing
on the operation of leading advanced producer service firms. Empirical research
into these networks has utilized data on the global location strategies of firms,
that is, where their offices are, what functions they perform and their importance
(Taylor 2004). In their recent research (Taylor et al. 2010) an interlocking
network model has been devised, based on the study of 75 of the top producer
service and banking/finance firms in 526 cities. The offices of these firms are
scored from 0 being no presence in a city to 5 being the headquarters. This
produces the service value of a city to the firm as a measure of the connectivity
of the city, based on the assumption of more significant flows occurring between
the major offices. From these measures a hierarchy of cities ranked as alpha,
beta or gamma and either plus or minus has been produced, with alpha++ being
the most connected world cities (London and New York) (figure 4.3).
While research into global city networks has become more nuanced in
recent years, a number of limitations to these analyses remain. As Brenner
and Keil (2006) note in their edited reader on global cities, ultimately this
In their paper, Grant and Nijman (2002) both experienced significant socio-spatial
offer a comparative analysis of the spatial transformation from the 1980s onwards as
impacts of global economic restructuring in a consequence of economic liberalization
two cities in the Global South, Accra in policies and the arrival of significant foreign
Ghana and Mumbai in India, cities not direct investment. The analysis is based on
normally considered within global cities a survey undertaken by the authors of
research. Grant and Nijman’s analysis foreign companies in each city, mapping the
focuses on the changing foreign corporate location of company headquarters of foreign
presence in the two cities as a key measure and domestic firms and assessing their
of economic globalization and a key global links (no easy task, as the authors
component in the changing corporate explain in their methodology!).
geographies of the two cities. While Accra
and Mumbai are different in size and During the colonial period, the landscapes
cultural setting, they share similar global of both cities exhibited high levels of
economic positions, a similar historical segregation of ‘foreign’ and ‘native’
British colonial experience, act as gateway commercial enterprises and residential
cities for both countries’ economies and areas (the classic ‘dual city’ – see chapter
City economies • 71
continued
three), although these boundaries were markets, and the availability of new building
eroded and became blurred in the early land through the free market, which tends
twentieth century. In the wake of to be away from the traditional business
independence, the foreign corporate centres.
and residential presence declined in
Therefore, within both cities three central
relative terms and former European
business districts exist, each different in
commercial zones became nationalized
terms of their importance to foreign and
by the development and spread of emerging
domestic companies and in their links to the
domestic companies. Economic liberalization
global economy: a district centred on the old
in the 1980s heralded a significant
native town with a mix of residential uses
increase in foreign corporate activity in
and mainly small domestic businesses; a
both cities, particularly finance and
district centred on the former colonial
producer service companies. In both cities,
European town, mainly in commercial use
finance and producer service firms display
with larger domestic companies and some
a high degree of spatial concentration.
foreign firms; and finally a newly developed
However, while domestic owned firms are
business district, dominated by producer
concentrated into the old native and
and financial services with a large number
European commercial districts, new foreign
of global foreign firms. Domestic firms tend
owned firms are disproportionately located
to be more connected to the global economy
in new global commercial business districts,
if they are located in business districts with
in suburban locations on roads leading to
a disproportionately large share of foreign
the airport in Accra and on reclaimed land
companies. The authors conclude that these
close to the commercial and political heart
corporate geographies are quite different to
of the city in Mumbai. As in other world
those of globalizing cities of the West which
cities these companies value the propinquity
warrant further investigation by urban
to other foreign companies. Additionally, the
researchers.
locational decisions of new foreign firms are
conditioned by the operation of local land Source: Grant and Nijman (2002)
The structuralist slant on the city, and a focus on change at a global scale,
can provide many important insights. However, this perspective can frequently
lead to a lack of consideration of the changes on the ground within cities,
specifically how economic changes impact on particular cities and urban
populations. In this section we examine the ways in which urban economies
are being reconstituted as a result of the interplay between the changing global
economic forces discussed above and local economic, political and cultural
factors. The potential scope of the topics which could be covered here is vast,
so some selection is necessary and therefore we have focused discussion on a
few of the significant economic changes that have impacted on cities and their
populations recently. This section examines changes in manufacturing industry,
72 • Themes
the rise of service and creative economies in cities and growth in informal
economic activities, highlighting the implications of these changes for the
internal geographies of different cities, particularly their form and labour
markets.
1975 7,351
1980 6,801
1985 5,254
1990 4,994
1995 3,918
2000 3,951
2004 3,282
2009 2,571
Figure 4.4 (above) Sheepcote Street canal area, Birmingham in the late-1980s
prior to redevelopment (below) The same area today, part of the Convention Quarter
redevelopment close to the National Indoor Arena.
Source: Author’s photographs
76 • Themes
Generally, the growth of these new industrial spaces has been largely distinct
from areas of industrial decline, focusing on so-called emergent ‘sun belt’
locations in environmentally attractive locations or older university towns.
Some older urban areas have benefited from these developments, where cities
have a perceived cultural vibrancy, often associated with major universities.
The most often cited example of this new industrial space is Silicon Valley in
California. From a largely agricultural area in the 1950s, it has developed to
become a major centre for high-technology activities, based on a flow of
innovations and highly qualified personnel from local universities. Based on the
foundation of the Stanford Industrial Park, it has grown to a self-sustaining zone
of high-technology innovation (Scott and Storper 2003). There have been many
subsequent attempts to replicate the success of Silicon Valley in other locations
through the development of technology parks or the designation of technopoles,
such as Cambridge in the UK (Castells and Hall 1994) and Bangalore in India
(Audirac 2003). These industrial parks are often decentred and located on the
edge of cities, next to the neighbourhoods from which their knowledge rich
workers are drawn.
While the majority of these new industrial spaces are opening up in very
different locations to old industrial spaces, a key question for policy makers is
whether their success can be translated into these older industrial areas in order
to generate new employment opportunities. Within some cities, new industrial
clusters based on innovative, knowledge based, technology intensive activities
such as computer graphics, software design and multi-media businesses are
emerging as part of a new economy of the inner city. Their growth is linked to
parallel developments of cultural industries (see below) which have been
seen to physically and culturally revitalize inner city neighbourhoods. Older
manufacturing cities have attempted to foster and attract these new enterprises
through marketing and regeneration activities in order to offset the consequences
of decline in traditional manufacturing activities (see chapters six and nine).
New industrial spaces are also emerging within rapidly urbanizing parts of
the world. Here cities, typically large port cities, perform ‘gateway’ functions,
linking city regions to global economic forces. In areas such as South East Asia,
local administrations have encouraged industrial and urban expansion by setting
up export processing zones (EPZs). EPZs are centres for labour intensive
manufacturing, based on the import of raw materials and the export of factory
products. Within these EPZs, TNCs benefit from low wage costs, government
City economies • 77
tax concessions and freedom from many legislative ties. Over 90 countries had
established EPZs by the end of the twentieth century as a way to stimulate
industrial development and to generate foreign export revenue (Pacione 2009).
Many locations are coastal, as in China, although one of the largest areas of
EPZs is along the Mexico–US border. Within these areas, sharp distinctions
can emerge between modern internationally orientated business sectors and
traditional locally orientated sectors of the economy (see also Grant and Nijman
2002 – case study above). This pattern of foreign direct investment induced
urbanization within economically developing countries is referred to as exo-
urbanization, where smaller settlements expand as a result of inward investment
and rural to urban migration, and merge to form urban regions. This process of
urbanization is fuelled both by direct policy intervention from above drawing in
large scale foreign direct investment (Shen et al. 2002) but also by growth from
below in smaller factories and settlements (Ma 2002).
Cultural industries
foster creativity and harness it in cities. The clustering of cultural and creative
industries in cities is seen to be underpinned by the idea of the city as a cultural
crucible (Hall 1998). Hubbard (2006: 212) notes that the link between urbanity
and creativity is an important myth about cities. While it is clearly a myth that
creativity only exists in cities, it is an important myth that underpins many city
marketing and economic development strategies (see chapter nine). The work
of Richard Florida (2004) is frequently cited in discussions about how cities
acquire competitive advantage in a global economy and has been influential in
policy circles. Examining cities in the US, Florida highlights the importance of
a concentration of a creative class (highly educated, knowledge rich workers)
within a city which feeds the creation of new business ideas and commercial
products. He also emphasizes the significance of the socio-cultural diversity
of urban life that attracts these workers to particular cities. To be competitive
cities must attract and retain these creative individuals, which feeds into city
marketing campaigns which emphasize the cosmopolitan, vibrant and chic
aspects of particular cities and urban areas (again see chapter nine).
While this work flags up why creative people may be drawn to particular
cities, research has rarely elaborated ‘how creative individuals are stimulated
by the city as a living environment’ (Hubbard 2006: 218). Hubbard notes that
to date there has been little in the research literature on how creativity is
produced and practised in cities, particularly the material dimensions of these
activities and their mundane practices, such as socializing in bars. The work of
Allen Scott (1999, 2000) has been important in exploring the ways in which
the consumption activities of creative individuals create a collective creativity,
where local cultures shape economic activity and economic activity becomes
a key component of local social life. Places of sociability are consequently
more than just meeting places, but are also a source of inspiration for creative
activities, both in terms of their physicality and via the mix of people and
objects within them. However, knowledge and networking remain important to
creative industries, particularly tacit knowledge which is not necessarily written
down yet which is needed to pick up on trends which emerge quickly. It is the
intensity and multi-disciplinarity of this networking activity, and its capacity
to generate new ideas and connections, which are important to creativity.
However, for some the importance of proximity and face to face contact is
overstated, arguing that clusters need to be seen as spaces with fluid boundaries
and relations stretched out beyond the locale, increasingly globally (Hubbard
2006: 234). Krätke (2002), for example, demonstrates the complex nature of
these local-global networks with regard to the clustering of the film industry in
Babelsberg on the outskirts of Berlin, highlighting that firms were both closely
networked within the local business area, but were also integrated into supra-
regional networks of global media firms. To this end, Hubbard (2006) notes
that this underpins the development of conference centres and the putting on of
City economies • 79
events such as festivals and expos which can be used to foster global links
which nourish local creative milieu.
However, while ideas about fostering creativity in cities have become popular
in planning circles they have been subject to some critique (Peck 2005).
Some commentators have argued that pandering to the needs of a relatively
well-off creative class may lead city authorities to ignore disadvantaged
groups who may not experience the benefits of this economic growth and
whose local cultures may be marginalized in favour of more commercially
orientated cultural activities. Similarly, within discussions about the benefits
of fostering the creative industries there is a tendency to glamorize the creative
dimensions of this work and to play down the mundane and sometimes poorly
paid nature of many of these jobs (Crewe et al. 2003). Another concern is that
these bohemian, socially mixed creative spaces are short-lived, as they become
incorporated into more conventional aspects of urban life and popularization
leads to increasing commodification and commercialization of these areas
(see case study below). Paradoxically, formal policies to enhance cultural
quarters may increase rents and property prices, fostering gentrification
(see also chapter eleven) and undermining the processes that created such
quarters in the first place (Hubbard 2006: 225).
continued
also examples of attempts to demonetarize social and economic divides, and
consumption, with stalls where people are inhabitants pay fees to the Copenhagen
free to leave and take second-hand goods, City Hall and Ministry of Defence. The
and a weekly ‘collective kitchen’ meal where Free Town is characterized by a relaxed
people bring and share self-cooked food. experience of time, with people just
However, its most (in)famous economic strolling, drinking, chatting at all times of
activity has been the selling of soft drugs in day and night, which feeds into its creative
a contained space named Pusher Street, identity but is also suggestive of subtle
which in recent years has been deemed unemployment and social marginality. As
problematic by both Christiania residents Vanolo points out, Copenhagen’s official
and the wider city alike due to its increasing stance towards Christiania is ambivalent,
infiltration and control by organized on the one hand celebrating its alternative
criminal gangs. creativity and on the other seeking to control
and normalize its activities, remove its
In the paper, Vanolo argues that Christiania
‘excesses’, particularly the hash market of
represents an interstitial, or in-between,
Pusher Street, and make it available for
economic space, where there is ongoing
consumption in the market as a tourist
negotiation and hybridization between the
attraction. In many respects, Christiania
market capitalism and the Free Town’s
represents an ‘odd’ economic space that
autonomist and collective spirit and
troubles mainstream conceptions of
activities. A number of the institutions that
creativity and the creative city by revealing
are central to the Christiania experience are
that creativity is both fluid and situated.
managed collectively, yet many people who
Despite its alternative image, Christiania is
live in the community work outside it in
still visibly situated in a capitalistic market
Copenhagen, and many businesses are
economy, but in a place-specific and
run individually. The inhabitants are not
contradictory way.
self-sufficient, there are visible internal
Source: Vanolo (2013)
The expansion of the service sector has been a key component of the transition
to advanced capitalism in the global economy. The proportion of global output
attributed to the service sector, measured as a percentage of GDP, rose steadily
during the second half of the twentieth century (table 4.3).
The service economy covers a wide range of activities which take place
within cities. One of the key areas of growth has been in the producer service
sector, which provides a range of services to businesses (e.g. accountancy,
legal services and advertising) and to people (e.g. insurance and banking).
These new office functions have added to more traditional areas of urban
service employment, such as retailing. While retailing has been an ever
present service activity within cities, in recent years the sector has undergone
Table 4.3 The rising significance of the service sector, globally
Total GDP ($ million) Services (% of GDP) GDP (average annual Services (average annual
% growth) % growth)
Source: World Bank World Development Indicators 2010 (table 4.1: 228 and table 4.2: 232)
82 • Themes
For many cities there has been a shift in their economic core from one based
on manufacturing to one based on banking and service activities. At the heart of
this new urban economy has been growth in the producer service sector. These
services have become the fastest growing economic sectors of many large
cities in Europe and North America, with significant numbers of international
linkages. Producer service employment rose for a number of reasons in the
early 1980s. These include the demands of businesses for specialized financial
and legal services, the co-ordination required to orchestrate spatially (globally)
dispersed economic activities within companies (TNCs) and the increased
demands of households for services (Bryson et al. 2008).
While many of the operations of TNCs have dispersed, particularly routine
production and back office functions, the command and control of functions
and headquarters of major global businesses have remained within the central
areas of major world financial centres (see global cities discussion above).
The consolidation of corporate headquarters in large urban areas reflects their
need to access national and international markets and demand for a highly
skilled labour force and a range of sophisticated specialist service inputs. Only
the very largest and well connected cities can viably satisfy these requirements.
This has fuelled the increasing expansion of producer service operations within
these cities which support the operation of these TNCs. The concentration
of corporate headquarters in key world cities has provided producer service
firms with a lucrative and spatially concentrated market. In common with the
clustering evident in cultural industries (see above), the social environments
of bars, restaurants and clubs are important to the formation of social networks
which are heavily drawn on in business, and which are seen as difficult to
reproduce outside these central city environments even with sophisticated
telecommunication links (Sassen 2002).
City economies • 83
Figure 4.5 Docklands, London, the focus for major producer service expansion in the
1980s and 1990s with new office buildings in close proximity to poor urban communities
Source: Author’s photograph
84 • Themes
Retailing
The trading of goods and services has been a core activity in cities from the
development of the earliest ones, with market areas forming a key element of
the pre-industrial city (see chapter three). Today, retail activities continue to
constitute a core element of urban life and in many urban areas they are a
significant land use. The geographies of urban retailing have been examined
from two main perspectives: an economic perspective focusing on the physical
structure of retail environments, and a cultural perspective which looks at
retailing as a consumption activity.
Urban geographers have had a long-standing interest in the spatial and
hierarchical organization of retailing in the city. Early research was dominated
by the neo-classical economic approaches of bid rent and central place theory
City economies • 85
The demand and supply side changes have led to important changes in
traditional retail structures, particularly leading to the growth of planned
out-of-town suburban shopping areas, superstores and retail parks. In the US,
these trends precipitated the so-called ‘malling of America’ from the 1960s
onwards with significant growth of out-of-town shopping malls and the related
decline in downtown shopping opportunities (Wrigley and Lowe 2002). The
idea of the mall has proved adaptable to changing retail trends with more
differentiated and niche malls opening up from the 1990s onwards and even
returning to some downtowns as the result of leisure-culture based regeneration
schemes, such as South Street Seaport in New York, or Pier 39 in San Francisco
(figure 4.6).
These new retail patterns have affected many cities around the world, although
the impact of large scale out-of-town developments has varied as a result of
variations in supply side changes and particularly the actions of planning
authorities. For example, in many European countries, such as the UK, the
growth of out-of-town shopping has been restricted by national planning
policies which have sought to protect inner city locations and neighbourhood
centres as shopping locations. A key factor in all these changes is that parts
of the urban population have been left behind by these moves, mainly older,
poorer and less mobile populations with lower purchasing power. The term
the ‘disadvantaged consumer’ (Bromley and Thomas 1993) has been used to
describe these groups, which have less choice in shopping as a result of the
flight of shops from inner city locations, through financial exclusion or as a
result of problems in accessing out-of-town shopping locations. Some poorer
inner-city districts have been abandoned by major retailers, leaving behind
shopping ‘deserts’ which limit choice and compound disadvantage for
populations living in those areas (Wrigley 2002).
The other key area of research in the new geography of retailing is concerned
with consumption and consumerism. This acknowledges that increasingly
shopping is carried out not merely as a necessity, but as a social activity and
cultural pursuit, linked to identity production. Increasing interest in consumption
has been fuelled by interest in the emergence of the post-industrial city, which is
seen to be organized around consumption rather than production (Zukin 1998).
Zukin notes the plethora of spaces of mainstream and alternative consumption
(malls, multiplexes, cafés, festival market places, nightclubs, super-casinos,
heritage sites and museums) that exist within post-industrial cities. Retail
research has focused on retail spaces as sites of cultural reproduction, such as
the department store (see for example, Blomley 1996; Domosh 1996), the mall
(Goss 1999) and the street (Zukin 1995). Hannigan (1998) has charted the
emergence of new hybrid consumption activities and spaces in contemporary
cities, termed ‘shoppertainment, eatertainment and edutainment’. While the
linkage of entertainment and retailing can be traced back to the emergence of
the first department stores in the nineteenth century, within contemporary cities
there is seen to be an explosion of ‘experiential retail spaces’ in the form of
themed malls, festival market places and global brand stores (Wrigley and
Lowe 2002).
Until relatively recently urban tourism was a rather neglected area in tourism
and urban studies, as noted by Ashworth (1989) in a key review of the subject.
The visitor economy was not viewed as a distinct area of activity in most city
economies, except within recognized resort towns, and little attempt was made
to manage this provision separately from other urban management functions
(Page 1995). In part this stems from a certain difficulty in distinguishing tourist
visits from other visits to the city, for example as part of the city’s service
function, contributing to the invisibility of urban tourism within urban policy
and management. However, in the context of post-industrial urban economies,
88 • Themes
Third, there is the petty capitalist sector which consists of small-scale production
units. Also known as the ‘downgraded manufacturing sector’ this informal
manufacturing sector is common in cities of the Global South and is linked to the
formal manufacturing sector through outsourcing to small factory units and also
to workers in the home (Drakakis-Smith 2000; Sassen 2000). However, it is also
present in cities of the Global North and is common in particular industries in
world cities such as the clothing industry which has a history of using migrant
labour in sweatshop conditions (Leonard 1998). These businesses often flout
regulations related to factory or labour conditions, such as minimum wages,
working hours or the use of child labour. This sub-sector is also growing in size as
a result of changes to manufacturing processes, specifically the growth of small
batch production and the need for flexibility and rapid changes in output, which
has encouraged greater subcontracting, increased temporary working, piece work
and home-working. Finally, Potter and Lloyd-Evans note the criminal sub-sector
representing the undesirable face of the informal sector, including activities such
as drug trafficking and prostitution. This illegal informal economy occupies a
grey area between the underground, hidden or black economy, which involves
paid production or sale of goods and services that are unregistered by or hidden
from the state in terms of tax, social security or labour law purposes but legal in
92 • Themes
Informal Formal
Ease of entry Difficult entry
Irregular hours/pay Fixed hours and pay
Local inputs External inputs
Family property Corporate property
Small scale Large scale
Labour intensive Capital intensive
Adapted technology Imported technology
Non-school skills Formal taught skills
Unregulated market Protected market
other respects, and the underground criminal economy and organized crime
(Pacione 2009).
The characteristics of the informal sector are frequently described as the mirror
image of those of the formal sector (figure 4.8). For many urban dwellers, the
appeal of, or inevitability of, informal sector working is the ease of entry into
the sector, requiring as it does limited formal qualifications or high cost inputs
which serve to limit access to formal employment opportunities for many within
cities. In addition, despite the heterogeneity of the informal sector in terms of
activities and workers, a common characteristic is the small scale of activities
often organized around family or kinship groups, in contrast to the larger scale
corporate enterprises of the formal sector.
However, while it is useful to view the formal and informal sectors as
opposites in order to highlight their key characteristics, in reality the
formal and the informal sectors are not separate sectors and are rightly now
viewed by researchers as part of a more complex and interlinked continuum
of employment. This involves complex production, supply and marketing
chains and fluid employment status. Daniels (2004) notes that the global
production chains for products such as foodstuffs, electronic goods, clothing
and footwear span across the formal and informal sectors, with interactions
within the chain controlled by a series of ‘middle men’ which serves to
erode accountability and limit the benefits for those workers at the bottom
of the chain. Equally, individuals do not solely operate within either the
formal or informal economy but can operate across both sectors, holding
down two or more ‘jobs’, or will move frequently between sectors depending
on personal circumstances and the availability of employment opportunities
within cities.
City economies • 93
Summary
order with a number of key world cities acting as the command and control
centres of the global economy as a result of their role as centres of financial
and producer service activities. Recent global economic change has also
precipitated the decline and deindustrialization of many manufacturing
cities in the Global North, which have sought to transform their economies
by attempting to generate or attract new cultural or service industries. Another
key concern for urban economies and populations has been the increasing
polarization of their labour markets with a growing divide between those
holding a small number of well paid professional jobs and a larger majority in
low paid, precarious employment or active in informal economic activities.
Follow-up activities
Essay title: ‘a small number of world cities … are effectively the command and
control points for global capitalism’ (Clark 2003: 12). Critically examine why
certain cities have attained this world city status.
Project idea
What evidence can you find of new economic information held by local government or
sectors in your city or a city with which you business promotion organizations). You
are familiar? In what areas of the city are might also review local economic
they located and is this in areas similar to or development policies to examine whether the
different from previous rounds of economic patterns of growth and change you observe
activity? Collect information on the numbers are driven by particular local initiatives. Think
and types of new activity developing either about the implications of any new economic
through field observation or via the collection geographies for those populations involved in
of local business information (for example previous rounds of economic activity.
City economies • 95
Further reading
Books
● Brenner, N. and Keil, R. (2006) (eds) The Global Cities Reader, Abingdon:
Routledge
A comprehensive collection of key articles exploring a number of facets of
global cities research. The editors provide a good overview of the research and
useful introductions to each reading.
● Dicken, P. (2015) Global Shift: Mapping the Changing Contours of the World
Economy, 7th edn, New York: Guilford Press
Established as a classic textbook examining global economic change.
● Mukhija, V. and Loukaitou-Sideris, A. (eds) (2014) The Informal American City:
Beyond Taco Trucks and Day Labor, Cambridge, MA: MIT Press
An edited collection considering the growing range of informal economic spaces
of the American city.
● Sassen, S. (2002) The Global City: New York, London, Tokyo, 2nd edn,
Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press
Classic text on the impacts of economic globalization on world cities.
● Taylor, P.J. and Derudder, B. (2015). World City Network: A Global Urban
Analysis, 2nd edn, New York: Routledge
Updated edition of a key text which examines the development of the world city
network and the role of service firms within this.
Journal articles
This paper provides a different take on the pros and cons of the informal
economy, by examining its role in the development of the ‘green economy’ in
cities and outlining the risks that such attempts pose for vulnerable informal
dwellers and workers.
● Daniels, P.W. (2004) ‘Urban challenges: the formal and informal economies in
mega-cities’, Cities, 21(6): 501–511
A useful overview of the significance of the informal economy to cities,
particularly megacities in the Global South. Also critically examines the
relationship between the formal and the informal economies.
● Hober, G. (2013) ‘Surviving the era of deindustrialization: the new economic
geography of the urban rust belt’, Journal of Urban Affairs, 35(4): 417–434
The article examines the differing trajectories of transformation of American
‘rust belt’ cities over the course of economic restructuring.
● Van Meeteren, M. (2016) ‘Can the straw man speak? An engagement with
postcolonial critiques of “global cities research”’, Dialogues in Human
Geography, 6(3): 247–267
Paper which engages with recent postcolonial critiques of global cities research,
and which provides a useful overview of recent debates in this area.
Websites
In urban societies, towns and cities are the place of politics: of revolutions in
Paris in 1789 and Petrograd in 1917; of long reformist struggles about
‘collective consumption’ typified by the urban politics of the UK’s industrial
cities through the first two-thirds of the twentieth century; of elite-dominated
‘growth coalitions’; and of the new politics of sustainability with its base in
‘new social movements’.
(Byrne 2001: 167)
the lynchpins of its processes and networks (Sassen 1994; Clark 2003; Brenner
and Kiel 2006; Kim 2008).
However, we need to be a little careful how we think about these various
levels of government. We deliberately avoided using the word ‘scale’ in
the discussion above, which suggests a neat hierarchy that ascends from the
local scale, through the regional and national up to the international. Rather,
we should think of all of these ‘scales’ as juxtaposed within sites, crucially
urban sites that provide the arenas for the vast majority of the world’s political
power. Similarly, urban politics does not take place within cities that are
hermetically sealed entities, rather local politics includes the involvement of
many actors from beyond the city, such as developers and politicians from
national and international institutions, who all work with local actors. It is
these juxtapositions and interconnections between different scales that
constitute and shape the realm of urban politics in a global world (Amin
2002a; McNeill 2009).
Before moving on it is worth pausing briefly and considering why we need
city governments. Why do we have multiple levels of government within
nations, typically characterized as the central and the local state, and what are
the practical implications that flow from the model of multi-level government?
In the first instance, it should be very apparent that nation states are far from
uniform entities but rather there exists a huge amount of geographical variation
within their borders. For this reason, some form of local level representation
would seem appropriate (Cox and Mair 1987; Duncan and Goodwin 1988).
This is especially the case where nation states are composed of formerly
separate territories, perhaps with very different ethnic or cultural identities,
where the ‘hold’ that the nation state has over its territory might be at times
fragile. Local representation can be an important building block in holding the
state together. Indeed, even in strong, centralized, in some cases, dictatorial
regimes, some level of local government has almost always been present, and
often vital to the functioning of these regimes (Byrne 2001: 169–170).
National representation cannot always deal adequately with local
differentiation, and so local electoral politics was clearly a necessary part of
representative democracy.
(Duncan and Goodwin 1988: 45, in Byrne 2001: 170)
Michael Pacione (2009: 419) expresses this as three principles of the local state:
1 Liberty from central authority and abuse of central power.
2 Popular participation in government, which is encouraged by the proximity
of decision makers and citizens.
3 Efficiency in government, which is advanced by a scale of organization that
permits locally sensitive provision of public services and functions.
100 • Themes
However, beyond this, is there something about the city specifically that makes
some form of local government important? Cities, particularly in the present
period, are places of intense juxtapositions of many kinds. These might be
juxtapositions of land use, social groups, levels of wealth and poverty and so
on. In this context, the potential for conflict is heightened and the local state is
important in the management and mediation of this situation (Watson 1999).
However, historically, the reasons for the desirability of city governments and
the functions they performed were somewhat different. In the rapidly expanding
cities of the world’s first industrial nations, for example, the speed of the growth
of cities and the levels of poverty and dreadful conditions of public health that
emerged under what was only crudely governed development, demanded that
the state intervene and ensure that these cities became safe, clean, ordered
environments for their escalating populations (Hall 2002). Despite the necessity
for the local state and for urban governments, though, the relationship between
these different levels has been far from harmonious. Duncan and Goodwin, cited
in Byrne (2001: 170), have referred to the local state as ‘both obstacle and agent
for the national state’ (1988: 46), something that we return to below.
The literature of urban politics has been characterized by a long-standing
multi-disciplinarity of which urban geography has been only one among many
contributors (McNeill 2009: 141). Each of these disciplines contributes slightly
different takes on the issue of urban politics and governance. This is not to say,
however, that there is not a great deal of cross-disciplinary dialogue. Indeed,
this is perhaps more prevalent in the study of urban politics than in any other
aspect of urban studies. This chapter will try to outline a distinctly geographical
perspective on urban politics. It will draw on work from across the disciplinary
range but will emphasize issues such as the importance of space, place and
scale that are of particular interest to geographers and which have largely
shaped their contribution to the field.
others writing from a broadly Marxist perspective, most notably David Harvey
(1973, 1982), are helpful here in their articulation of the seemingly unstable
nature of the capitalist system. They see capitalism as a system tending
periodically towards crisis as capital ‘switches’, seeking profitable investment
opportunities (see chapter four for a fuller discussion of this). Indeed, the city is
a key site of this capital switching and one where its effects are most acutely felt.
The results of these periodic crises are not socially benign and, consequently, one
of the purposes of the state is handling these crises and the change they produce.
Marxists, therefore, would argue that this ‘crisis management’ by the state
provides some stability and support to the capitalist system and is vital to its
maintenance.
Urban places and urban lives are not static. These systems are not close
to equilibric. Their natural condition is not a steady state maintained by
negative feedback mechanisms. They do change, and change in terms of
transformation of form, while remaining within the general social relations
of capitalism with its foundation of wage labour. The ‘task’ of the state and
associated agents of governance is, in large part, that of handling those
changes, while at the same time maintaining the social and ecological
foundations of the system as a whole.
(Byrne 2001: 168)
Another way in which the formal political arena is constituted, indeed the way
in which it achieves the task of ‘handling’ capitalism’s inherent instability, is
through a set of practices. What is it, then, that local authorities do? Local
authorities are large complex organizations (see exercise below) with many
departments and many functions. Pacione (2009: 418) provides a concise
overview of this complexity, identifying six key functions of local authorities:
1 Providing public services.
2 Acting as an agent of central government, as when it enforces state
legislation.
3 Formulating policies and plans such as those relating to local development.
4 Representing the locality in dealings with other governments, as when
seeking financial aid.
5 Resolving conflicts between competing local interests, for example, over the
location of facilities.
6 Regulating private-sector activities, as in land-use zoning and building
control.
Despite being a universal feature of urban societies, city governments vary a
great deal internationally. This variation includes the form and structure of city
government, its power and significance and its activities (Savage et al. 2003:
153; Pacione 2009: 418). This variation is well illustrated by the contrasts
between the organization of city governments in the UK and the US. In the UK,
102 • Themes
Exercise
Examine the structure of city government in structures and activities of the two
an area you are familiar with. Can you find authorities differ? Can you think of reasons
examples of all of the activities outlined why this might be? Perhaps think about
above? Are there some that seem more national differences in the nature of the
important than others? Why do you think local state and differences stemming from
this is? Compare this with an authority in a their contrasting urban settings. What
contrasting urban setting – perhaps in constraints do you think the two authorities
another country. In what ways do the operate under (see below)?
power over city government, indeed all local government, is held by parliament,
whereas in the US this power lies in the hands of states. It would appear that the
power to reorganize local government is more likely to be exercised in the UK
than in the US. This is evidenced by the Conservative central government’s
abolition of the left-wing Greater London Council in 1986, along with six other
metropolitan authorities, a decision that was driven more by politics than by a
desire for efficient government of large metropolitan areas. In terms of structure
there are also some striking differences between the organization of local
government in the two countries. While in the UK urban areas are governed by
single unitary district councils, the American system is characterized by a series
of overlapping levels of government topped by the state and including counties,
townships, municipalities and special districts. The federal nature of American
politics means that the form and structure of the organization of these levels of
government varies in different parts of the country. The special district is the
most widespread form of local government in the US and is responsible for the
provision of specific services such as hospitals, fire protection and heritage
preservation among many others. The number of special districts in the US has
shown continued upward growth over the course of the twentieth and into the
twenty-first centuries (Pacione 2009: 424–425).
In addition to the differences noted above, the relationships between city
government and the processes of urbanization in different countries result in the
emergence of very different issues internationally. For example, an issue that
dominates politics in many American urban regions is the fragmentation of
American urban politics linked to processes of suburbanization. While there is
evidence that this exists to some extent in the UK (Pacione 2009: 430), it is
considerably less of an issue. The suburbanization of the American population is
a highly selective process. Generally, it is the wealthier, white, urban dwellers in
the US who migrate to the suburbs, leaving behind poorer populations composed
of relatively high numbers of ethnic minority groups. While this is inherently
significant in socio-economic terms it becomes significant in fiscal and political
Urban politics • 103
terms because of the structure of American local politics. Linked closely to the
‘edge city’ phenomenon (see chapters three and twelve) these processes of
suburbanization have seen the widespread migration of certain types of voter,
and importantly, their property tax dollars, beyond the administrative boundaries
of cities. The result has been the fragmentation of American urban politics and
significant falls in local tax revenues to city administrations. From the point
of view of these suburbanites, and the same issue applies to commercial and
industrial property owners who are similarly taxed, suburbanization may be a
way of avoiding contributing to the costs of the social consumption needs of
poorer inner city residents. The issues around the differing needs, wants and
economic resources of city and suburban residents and the possibility of
defensive incorporation to protect the interests of suburbanites has emerged as a
major feature of the social and political geographies of American cities (Pacione
2009: 425–431). The decline of the city as a centre of political power in America
and the secession of power and resources to the suburbs has changed the face of
American local politics in many regions, resulting in the dominance of a politics
of suburban self-interest.
The continuing suburbanisation of population and the emergence of a
multi-nodal metropolis are likely to enhance the electoral power of the
outer municipalities in provincial policy making and increase the social and
financial disparities between inner and outer zones.
(Pacione 2009: 431–432)
of investment and jobs to localities (Logan and Molotch 1987; Cox and Mair
1988; Wolman and Goldsmith 1992; Hall and Hubbard 1996, 1998; Savage
et al. 2003: 169–185). What distinguishes this phase from earlier ‘managerial’
phases of urban government is the diminished role of the city government as a
provider of welfare services and collective consumption that has traditionally
been seen as the key function of local authorities (Castells 1977; Pinch 1985).
The implications of these changes have been felt far beyond the world of urban
politics, however, and raise questions about the very production and nature of
cities. It was Castells (1977) who first argued for the significance of the role
of collective consumption in shaping the city, prompting many to view the
city, during the managerial phase of urban government, ‘as the product of
bureaucratic action’ (Savage et al. 2003: 161; see also Hall and Hubbard 1996:
154). By contrast, entrepreneurialism in city government has seen more
piecemeal approaches to managing the city prompted, some would argue,
more by economic opportunity than public welfare strategy.
This entrepreneurial phase of local government has coincided with the
limitation and decrease of central government funding to local authorities in
many countries (Goodwin 1992), and the restriction of the amounts that local
governments are able to generate through taxation, although the differences
between centre–local relations internationally have affected the ways in which
this process is manifest in different places. This coincided with the severe
deindustrialization of many urban economies. The result of these financial
‘squeezes’ from above and below was a severe drop in the amount of funding
available to local government. On a more general level this reminds us that
local authorities are restrained in their freedom to act and operate under a
number of constraints (Pacione 2009: 419–423). This situation forced local
authorities to adopt much more entrepreneurial roles, promoting development
through functions that were traditionally seen as more the preserve of the
private sector. These have included spectacular property development, place
promotion (see chapters six and nine) and subsidy of private development.
Typically, this has been achieved in alliance with private capital.
As with any attempt at neat periodization, the division of urban government
into distinct managerial and entrepreneurial phases (characterized perhaps
by a politics of income distribution versus a politics of growth) carries with it
the risk of oversimplification. For example, while there is much discussion of
urban government as falling into these two clear phases there is little by way of
empirical evidence to categorically confirm its accuracy. Further, we know
relatively little of the extent to which both managerial and entrepreneurial
functions can co-exist within single authorities or more broadly within phases
of urban government. Indeed, David Harvey (1985) has recognized that urban
governors have long been key agents in the promotion of conditions favourable
to economic development within cities. The question then is the extent to which
Urban politics • 105
The discussion above highlights that when we talk about urban politics we are
referring to more than just the local authority. Entrepreneurialism in urban
government points to the crucial role played by private capital within the political
106 • Themes
arenas of cities. However, a third group of interests that we need to consider are
those of the community. Much urban political theory has sought to explore and
articulate the relationships between the local state, private capital and community
interests. At first glance the world of urban political theory can seem a complex
terrain to negotiate. However, we can begin to understand it by returning to two
of the questions outlined at the start of this chapter and mapping the main theories
of urban politics (see table 5.1) along two axes. The first axis is concerned with
the issue of whether power is concentrated in the hands of a relatively small
political elite or whether, on the other hand, it is more distributed between a wider
range of groups. All of the theories outlined in table 5.1 position themselves at
some point along this axis. The second axis is concerned with the autonomy of
Key works
Elitist perspectives
Cities are seen as being controlled by narrowly constituted, powerful Hunter (1953)
elites, primarily drawn from, and supporting, financial and business
interests.
Growth coalition theory
A development of the elitist perspective that suggests the influence Molotch (1976);
of strongly pro-growth ‘coalitions’ who benefit from growth in local Peterson (1981); Logan
and regional economies while seeking to persuade that the benefits and Molotch (1987)
of this growth are widespread. A key role for the local media has
been identified.
Regime theory
Combines aspects of elitist and pluralist perspectives. Sees power Stone (1989, 1993);
in the city as highly fragmented and the ability of individual groups Stone et al. (1994);
to hold power as limited. Focuses on the ways that groups come Peck (1995)
together to achieve specific objectives, thus producing power.
Pluralist perspectives
While recognizing the presence of powerful elite interests within Sayre and Kaufman
urban politics, argues that power is more diffuse and community (1960); Banfield (1961);
interests are also represented within government. Dahl (1961); Polsby
(1963)
State-managerial perspectives
The view that urban managers influence the control of social goods, Pahl (1970); Rex and
for example, through their control of urban land and property Moore (1974)
markets. This reflects, and protects, their interests and class
positions.
Urban politics • 107
Key works
Structuralist perspectives
Less a specific theory or set of theories of urban politics, more a Bachrach and Baratz
broader critical /theoretical perspective. Stressed the influence of (1962); Stone (1980);
the underlying socio-economic system on the political agenda of the Manley (1983)
local state. Provided a counter theory to earlier pluralist claims
about the dispersal of power in the city.
Neo-Marxist perspectives
A form of structuralism primarily characterized by its empirical Castells (1977); Piven
investigations of ‘systematic, cumulative, political inequality’ and Cloward (1977)
(Mollenkopf 2003: 238).
the state from the capitalist system. Whereas some theories of urban politics
have been very economically determinist in their outlook (Peterson, 1981),
others have seen the state, and city governments particularly, as less bound to
capitalism and capable of exercising their own autonomy (Stone 1989). At
the risk of oversimplifying somewhat, all theories of urban politics argue for
different positions along these two axes. Further, there is some overlap and
interdependence between the perspectives laid out in the table. For example,
growth coalition theory can be seen as a development of elite theory, whereas
some perspectives, such as some versions of growth coalition theory, are imbued
with aspects of wider theoretical positions such as structuralism. Finally, as the
subsequent discussion will highlight, and to reiterate an earlier point, we should
not suppose that one theoretical position will provide an adequate explanation for
all cities. Urban politics takes very different forms in different places. It may well
be that some theories provide good explanations of the situations in some places
but not elsewhere.
The influential studies of Floyd Hunter (1953) in Atlanta provided some
of the first major theoretical insights into urban politics. Hunter argued that
cities tend to be controlled by small, powerful elites. These are drawn primarily
from the financial and wider business communities along with career politicians
(Gottdiener and Budd 2005: 173). Although drawing criticism and inspiring
an extensive tradition of empirical research, from the likes of Robert Dahl,
that seemed to highlight the pluralist nature of urban politics, elite theory has
enjoyed some enduring legacy in the form of growth coalition theory.
Growth coalition theory, drawing primarily on work in North American cities,
has argued that it is possible to recognize elites, powerful within the politics
of major cities, composed of coalitions between groups such as land owners,
rentiers, state banks, utility companies and local authorities. Typically,
108 • Themes
Business, in particular, derives systematic power not only from its juridical
status and economic resources but from its attractiveness as an ally for those
who advance any policy change and from the shared subculture from which
private and public officials both emerged.
(Mollenkopf 2003: 238)
coalition theories are unable to account successfully for the public as active
members of growth coalitions (Stoker 1995). However, a number of studies in
the US have shown that the support of the public is a crucial factor in coalitions
achieving their objectives. Thus, the motivations that have lain behind coalition
formation and the groups that have taken an active part in them have been far
more diverse than some growth coalition theories have acknowledged.
Much of this weakness within growth coalition theory stems from a narrow and
unproblematic conception of power. Growth coalition theories regard power
in the context of urban politics as the ability to control people and resources.
While this might ultimately be the case, it fails to acknowledge the importance
of the processes through which this power is created. An alternative set of
theories emerged out of a reaction to overly economically deterministic versions
of growth coalition theory, especially the work of Peterson (1981) (Hubbard
et al. 2002: 182). This work, labelled regime theory and most closely associated
with the work of Clarence Stone (Stone 1989, 1993; Stone et al. 1994), focuses
specifically on the complex processes involved in the creation of power and, in
doing so, offers much more sophisticated accounts of the operation of urban
politics (Watson 1999; Byrne 2001; Hubbard et al. 2002).
Regime theory, therefore, sees power in cities as very fragmented and the
ability of groups to hold power as limited. Regime theory focuses on the ways
that groups within urban politics come together to overcome these limitations
by forming regimes to achieve specific objectives. The crucial contribution
that regime theory makes is that it demonstrates that the power to govern is not
given, it is not the inherent possession of any group; rather it has to be created
or produced. It is created, regime theorists argue, by different groups coming
together and blending their control and resources. In doing so they are able to
create the capacity to govern (Stoker and Mossberger 1994; Stoker 1995:
269–270; Hubbard et al. 2002: 182–185).
Typically, regimes are formed through some combination of a government
organization that has the ability to mobilize and co-ordinate resources and
private sector interests that might own resources. Often otherwise oppositional
groups are able to come together within regimes by each partner offering
selective incentives to the other. Sections of the public can enter regimes by
offering their support for developments, either through the ballot box or
expressed through community leaders (Stoker 1995). Regime theory is,
therefore, able to transcend a major weakness of growth coalition theory which
is able only to conceive of the relationship between certain groups in a very
polarized, oppositional way (Painter 1995; Stoker 1995). Regime theory, by
contrast, is able to show how, while this opposition may be constraining,
it does not necessarily determine the course of urban politics. Groups may be
able to transcend their divisions in specific instances, if it is in their interests to
110 • Themes
do so and if, in doing so, they are able to achieve the capacity to govern.
Consequently, regime theory paints a picture of urban politics as less rigid and
structurally determined than growth coalition theory and regime formation as
more fluid and complex (Stoker 1995).
Regime theory recognizes that urban politics is characterized by a diversity of
different types of regime that are composed of different groups often with very
different aims. Again, this contrasts with the more monolithic view of the
motivations of groups within growth coalition theory. Four main types of regime
have been recognized from studies in American cities (Stone 1993). Maintenance
regimes seek the preservation of the status quo rather than the promotion of
new development. Development regimes seek to promote development or arrest
or prevent decline within localities; this task requires greater resources and
co-ordination than that facing maintenance regimes. Middle class progressive
regimes may seek a variety of outcomes from development including social
gains; they may also seek to control development to prevent or limit externalities
such as environmental harm. Lower class opportunity expansion regimes seek
to enhance or expand the opportunities open to disadvantaged urban groups,
which typically involves major resources and substantial co-ordination. The
scale of these tasks and the relatively disempowered positions of the groups in
this last type of regime mean that they are often absent from American cities
(Stone 1993).
Exercise
Can you detect regimes in urban areas you their objectives? How do they seek to
are familiar with? Do they fit into the achieve these regimes and to what extent
categories outlined above? Who are the do you think they are successful?
members of these regimes and what are
Recent years have seen the growing city, or at least persuasive and compelling
emergence of politically powerful territorial versions of that character. This represents a
units and actors at the sub-national level. form of place myth that can act as an
Within Europe this has been characterized important commodity within a media
by the increased visibility of cities and dominated politics, forming impressions
regions often associated with high profile about cities and drawing attention to them.
and charismatic leaders. Some This emphasis on performance and
commentators, observing this, have spoken embodiment is something that has been
of the development of a ‘Europe of the underplayed in previous studies of political
regions’ or a ‘Europe of the cities’ that has power. City mayors achieve these roles in a
been accompanied by a ‘new mayoral class’. number of ways. They often strive to be seen
This process reflects increasing inter-urban as the epitome of their cities, highlighting
and inter-regional competition and growing their links to the locality through birth or
calls for regional cultural autonomy. Key here upbringing and through this to argue that they
is the ability of mayors to promote their cities embody the character of the place. They may
across wider political stages as well as to also stress elements of their appearance or
shape their development locally. Often these accent to strengthen this association. In this
two projects are closely interlinked. Helping sense, the local media play crucial roles in
to attract investment from external interests representing these individuals and their
may afford the mayors greater power to messages. Second, successful mayors
impose their vision on their locality, often in attempt to narrate compelling versions of the
association with these external actors. These future of their cities, often drawing on and
developments can be attributed to a number linking this to mythical aspects of the city’s
of recent factors including: re-establishing the history. Finally, mayors are important in the
position of Mayor of Paris in the 1970s, animation of city spaces. This might involve
which Jacques Chirac used as a base from the promotion of iconic city spaces, the
which to become French president; the high endorsement of mega developments, or
profile enjoyed by Pasqual Maragall, Mayor of engaging in battles with central government
Barcelona, linked to the success of that for the staging of events or the winning of
city’s hosting of the 1992 Olympics; the development. Mayors, then, play important
emergence of a new, less corrupt, regional tangible and symbolic roles in the shaping of
political class in Italy in the 1990s; the high their cities.
profile and international influence of Mayor This emphasis on the symbolic roles that
Rudy Giuliani’s policy of zero-tolerance in mayors play is not to suggest that this is all
New York; the creation of the position of they do. Mayors have to run administrations
elected Mayor of London and the associated efficiently, marshalling and distributing
publicity that accompanied the 2000 election resources if they are to be successful.
victory of Ken Livingstone; and the recent However, this example shows that to
creation of fora for collaboration between understand how urban politics works requires
European city mayors. an understanding of these previously
One of the key roles that mayors play for their neglected dimensions of political power.
cities is the embodiment of the character of a Source: McNeill (2001a)
112 • Themes
Finally, it is worth acknowledging that the political arena of cities is not above
corruption, the infiltration and compromise of its integrity by a range of
interests. It is difficult to assess the extent to which corruption is a major force
in shaping urban politics. It is not something, understandably, that researchers
have found easy to gather data on (though see Server 1996). It is unlikely
that any urban areas are entirely free of scandal and corruption, although the
majority of these cases will be relatively minor examples of backhanders or
favours paid to local officials by both legitimate businesses and low- to mid-
level criminals (‘oiling the wheels’ as this process is often euphemistically
called), which will have only marginal impacts on political decision making.
The ubiquity of political corruption as a theme within fictional drama is
probably an exaggeration of both its extent and its impacts and a highly
glamorized representation. It would appear though that in some parts of the
world corruption is a significant aspect of the politics of cities. For example,
Paoli (2005) and Saviano (2008) have discussed the long-standing and deep
interrelationships between the local state in Italy and various mafia groups.
Despite recent attempts to tackle the mafia in Italy it is probably true to say
that it is effectively part of the local state in some parts of the country, with
significant stakes in many public sector institutions. Elsewhere, although much
less embedded within the state than the mafia in Italy, Tremlett (2006) discusses
the infiltration of local administrations in parts of southern Spain by criminal
gangs. The problem of the corruption of the local, and at times central, state is a
significant issue in some parts of the Global South in which organized crime
and corruption are deeply embedded (Server 1996; Glenny 2008; Hall 2010a,
2010b). Studies of the political development and activities of these regions need
to acknowledge the extent to which they can and have been corrupted and the
effects of this. In the context of the Global South commentators have described
examples of ‘soft states’ where the government has only weak control over
public administration and where corruption of public officials is widespread
(Pacione 2009: 589). However, it should be acknowledged that this corruption
is not restricted, by any means, to the Global South. Despite the recognition of
corruption within urban politics, there is, to date, little by way of theory in this
area and few empirically rich case studies.
Castells’ perspective evolved considerably over the course of his work in this
area. Most notably it became less deterministic. This work provided major
contributions to debates across a number of urban disciplines while stimulating
significant theoretical developments within a range of issues from social
geography, through urban form, to urban politics. However, as one might
expect for such significant contributions, they came under a great deal of
critical scrutiny. It would be true to say that while Castells’ original ideas
have little direct influence on the study of urban politics today, they are still
recognized as a major event in the history of urban studies that undoubtedly,
perhaps as much through their critical reception as through the works
themselves, pushed forward theoretical debates across the urban disciplines
in ways that would otherwise not have been possible.
Savage et al. (2003: 163–164) recognize four major criticisms of Castells’
work. First, they point out that some critics (Lojkine 1976; Harvey 1982;
Massey 1984) have argued that in emphasizing the importance of collective
consumption, Castells failed to appreciate the ongoing significance of
production to urban relations. Second, they acknowledge feminist critiques
of the concept of collective consumption that fail to recognize that women
provide many services essential to the reproduction of the labour force for free
(see also Watson 1999: 202–203). As well as being a significant omission, this
undercuts the theoretical clarity of Castells’ notion of collective consumption.
Third, Castells seemed to overstate the potential of class as a basis within
which alliances could be made between urban social movements and labour
movements such as trade unions. These alliances he saw as essential to any
transformation of the political system. However, urban politics failed to unfold
in the ways that Castells envisaged, leading to some questioning the relevance
of his ideas to this realm. Finally, and perhaps most damningly, Savage et al.
(2003: 163–164) recognize that Castells’ work was overtaken by events. By the
1980s the widespread social-democratic consensus that had developed in the
post-war period in Europe and North America was breaking down. The period
since the early 1980s has seen the exponential growth of privatized, rather than
collective, consumption. In the case of housing, for example, we have seen the
growth of owner-occupation. Further, this period witnessed the increasing
market provision of services under successive iterations of New Right political
ideology. Castells’ work seemed to have little to say about this as alternative
theorists emerged, most notably the sociologist Peter Saunders (1979, 1981,
1984), whose work was empirically and theoretically more in tune with the era
than that of Castells.
Despite the criticisms of many aspects of Castells’ work from this period, the
concept of senses of identity among groups of people, that was argued to form
the basis of urban social movements, has remained key within subsequent
debates about the expanded realm of urban politics (Watson 1999; Byrne 2001;
Urban politics • 115
Savage et al. 2003: 162; Pacione 2009). Most commentators agree, however,
that the broad class based identities, within which it was argued the urban
social movements that Castells identified were rooted, have been superseded,
but certainly not replaced entirely, by a more fragmented, multiple politics of
identity. This perspective is in part a critique of the homogeneity that some
writers on urban social movements imagined characterized these groups
(Watson 1999: 228; Byrne 2001: 167) and in part a recognition that more
privatized forms of consumption, identified by commentators such as Peter
Saunders, have contributed to the general fragmentation of social identities.
Without doubt the last few decades have seen a significant rise in political
movements based around various forms of identity. Some of the more significant
and widespread of these include the American civil rights movement, a range
of disability rights movements internationally and women’s and gay liberation
movements. These have had significant impacts on politics, policy and attitudes
in many countries at the national and local levels. It is important to recognize,
though, that people possess multiple identities that may shift throughout their life
course. They may take up various, perhaps at times contradictory, positions with
regard to these movements and the politics of identity more generally.
Exercise
Can you identify any examples of politics of these examples (see case study)? Are the
identity, meaning or representation in an examples you have found purely local
urban area you are familiar with? What struggles or do they involve actors from
groups are involved in these struggles or beyond the city? What roles do the local
conflicts? What type of power are they able authorities take? Do any of the theories of
to deploy within these struggles and how urban politics outlined above help to make
are they able to do this? Do issues of sense of these examples?
language and representation emerge within
There is an urban politics then beyond the formal political arena. This is a
politics of everyday life that in recent decades has become increasingly focused
around issues of identity, meaning and representation (Watson 1999). When
thinking about urban politics we need to pay attention to the issues that are
rooted in the social and cultural geographies of cities and the meanings and
representation of urban space. They involve struggles over access to spaces,
the rights of marginalized groups to use the city in ways that might be formally
regulated, controlled or excluded (Amin et al. 2000; Amin and Thrift 2002).
There is a perhaps more mundane, everyday dimension to this politics of space
though that involves the daily, often minor, acts of transgression or resistance to
attempts to inscribe authority, order and regulation across the spaces of the city
116 • Themes
(see chapter ten). Urban politics may involve a performative politics that literally
takes to the streets in the form of protests, demonstrations or occupations
(Watson 1999: 234–236) or the everyday transgressive acts mentioned above.
It also involves struggles over the meanings that are ascribed to places and
spaces through political, planning or development discourse and which often
shape the ways that places develop (see chapter nine). It is at the intersections of
space, meaning, representation, regulation and development that this politics
of identity is often manifest. The case study below discusses one example of this,
highlighting a number of key points, and these are issues that are picked up and
discussed in more detail in chapters seven, nine and ten.
continued
Summary
Follow-up activities
Project idea
Undertake a study of the leader of a major city’s future, animating its spaces etc.). Do
urban area. Draw on the work of Donald you think these roles are purely symbolic or
McNeill discussed above. What roles can can you detect tangible influences of this
you recognize this political leader playing performative politics on political decisions
with regard to his or her urban area affecting the area and on the city’s
(promoting the city on wider political stages, development?
embodying the city, narrating versions of the
Further reading
Books
● Davies, J.S. and Imbroscio, D. (eds) (2009) Theories of Urban Politics, London:
Sage
Along with Judge et al.’s (1995) earlier volume of the same name offers a
comprehensive in-depth overview.
● Levine, M. (2015) Urban Politics: Cities and Suburbs in a Global Age, 9th edn,
New York: Routledge
120 • Themes
Journal articles
Websites
Introduction
As long as there have been cities their development has been planned and
controlled in some way; all that has varied is the nature and extent of that
planning and control. As Carter (1995) notes, while models of urban
development based on the idea of the operation of free market economic
forces proved appealing to urban theorists, the reality of city growth has
always been one where these forces have been controlled and regulated
in some way by those in power. Frequently, the urban planning and policy
arenas have been characterized as stages on which battles between capital,
the state and urban populations are played out in cities. How urban planning
and policy operate within cities then has important ideological underpinnings,
influenced by attitudes to the role that the state plays in influencing free
market forces and to the role of the public in influencing these processes.
Consequently, urban planning and policy have been viewed as either beneficial
or problematic by all sides of the political spectrum from far right to far left
(Pacione 2009).
This chapter continues by first providing an overview of the development of
core traditions and approaches to urban planning and policy. It then moves
on to consider early ideas about creating utopian visions of the ‘good city’ and
how these ideas have shaped later urban developments. This is followed by two
sections exploring more recent approaches to urban management: moves to
conserve valued urban environments and the development of urban policy.
Finally, the chapter discusses the challenges facing urban planning and policy
in the early twenty-first century.
Your responses to the exercise should hopefully have demonstrated the range of
things that could concern urban planning and policy, and the variety of purposes
that they could serve. Plans and policies can have different roles: they might
seek to restrict building, control or manage change or even look to facilitate
new development. The aims of plans and policies can also be wide ranging,
seeking, for example, environmental protection and sustainability, social
improvements, reduction in inequalities or economic regeneration and growth.
A range of agents can be involved, including planners and policy makers,
businesses, politicians and the public, all of whom often operate with different,
conflicting agendas and who possess differing levels of power and influence. It
is therefore difficult to put clear boundaries around the topic of urban planning
(Hall 2002) or to neatly define what constitutes urban policy (Cochrane 2007).
Equally, planning and policy are often considered separately within the
literature on cities, making identification of core themes and approaches tricky.
As we have seen, cities have often been viewed as disorderly places containing
unruly populations (Pile et al. 1999; Cochrane 2007). As cities have developed
across the globe and expanded in their size and complexity, the desire to
control their development and functioning and mitigate their problems has
also increased. Broadly speaking, planning can be seen to have the longest
intellectual tradition, stretching back to the city building ideas of early urban
civilizations. As we considered in chapter three, many early cities were
designed to reflect religious or cultural beliefs or followed standardized plans
when settlements were built in newly settled or conquered lands. However,
while examples of city planning can be traced back to these earliest urban
civilizations, the rise of widespread formalized attempts at planning cities has
its origins in the nineteenth century, associated with attempts to control the evils
of the rapidly expanding industrial cities of Europe and North America. It is
during this period that a number of key ideas about the planning of cities were
developed, which were the product of ideas generated by a number of planning
‘visionaries’ writing at the time (Hall 2002).
Here, urban planning was concerned with ‘the problem of cities’, managing the
growth and expansion of unruly cities and mitigating the urban social and
environmental problems associated with rapid population growth through the
124 • Themes
regulation of land uses and building development, through the provision of key
infrastructure and through the development of designs and plans to improve
their aesthetic qualities and their functioning. These concerns have continued to
be an important focus for urban planning in the twenty-first century, and are very
much a key concern for the rapidly expanding megacities of the Global South
(UN-HABITAT 2009). In its approach, planning can be viewed as a rational,
modern and technical response to the unruly city, seeking to impose order
through recording, quantifying, mapping and designing. These ideas and
approaches developed in the early twentieth century have proved important in
influencing much of what has subsequently been planned in the world’s cities
and have developed into the profession of planning as it functions in many
countries today. Here planning ideals are communicated through plans and
regulatory frameworks, ranging from grand masterplans for whole settlements to
loosen controls on building heights and land use zoning (UN-HABITAT 2009).
However, globally, planning systems differ as a result of their specific cultural
and historical origins, particularly as a result of the link between planning
and the law and the extent to which they operate within a framework of
constitutionally protected property and citizen rights, the degree to which plans
are flexible and planners can exercise discretion in decision making, and the
balance between local and central state control (Cullingworth and Nadin 2006).
For many of the older industrial cities of Europe and North America, new
challenges for planners and policy makers emerged in the late twentieth
century. In particular, there was a growing disillusionment with established
modernist planning traditions, particularly in terms of the top-down,
comprehensive redevelopment approaches adopted and the failure of these
approaches to eradicate the problems of the city and its most disadvantaged
populations (Hall 2002). Equally, new problems were beginning to emerge
in these cities associated with deindustrialization (see chapter four). Two
important strands emerged from this crisis in modernist planning. First, there
was growing public discontent at plans for comprehensive clearance and
renewal, fuelling a growing popular concern for conserving urban environments
valued by local populations. This was linked to concerns about what to do
with urban landscapes abandoned in the wake of deindustrialization and how
best to approach the regeneration of cities. Second, there was broader critique
of the Keynesian welfarist approach to governance and the management of
cities (Cochrane 2007). This precipitated the development of a range of policies
aimed at stimulating the economic, social and environmental revival of
depressed urban areas, from which have emerged new ways of planning and
managing cities, particularly associated with entrepreneurial approaches to
urban governance (see chapter five), referred to broadly as urban policy.
Urban policy then has a more recent intellectual parentage, and has been
concerned with ‘problems in cities’, particularly concentrations of urban social
Planning, regeneration and urban policy • 125
Over the course of the twentieth century the developments outlined above
have generated a significant body of theory and practice in urban policy and
planning. Despite their different origins, trajectories and foci some common
themes underpin a consideration of the variety of urban planning and policy
approaches. Most approaches can be placed within four broad arenas,
depending on their location on a continuum between state-led and market-led
development and the degree to which ideas are imposed by those in power or
stem from community priorities (see figure 6.1).
Free Market
State Control
While the popularity of planning has waxed and waned over the years, there
is currently a renewed interest in planning and a desire to better manage
urban areas (UN-HABITAT 2009). At the beginning of the twenty-first
century urban planning and policy agendas around the world have been
united in seeking to address the challenge of promoting sustainable urban
development (see also chapter thirteen). The global climate change agenda has
stimulated considerable discussion about how best to plan cities to make them
sustainable, although what this actually means and how sustainability can
be best approached and delivered are areas that are still far from clear, and
which continue to pose a considerable challenge to planners and policy
makers around the world. Equally, new approaches to planning and urban
management have developed which broadly tend to be more strategic, flexible
and action and implementation orientated. Many are also concerned with
developing new institutional processes, seeking to foster new forms of
community involvement and integrate planning with other local government,
voluntary and private sector activities. These new approaches are broadly
termed strategic spatial planning, which emerged in Europe in the 1990s and
which has spread to other developed and some developing countries since then
(UN-HABITAT 2009). Strategic spatial planning is seen as useful in that it
focuses on a process of decision making and does not carry with it a
predetermined set of urban forms or values, although many current plans
promote sustainability, inclusiveness and qualities of public space. However,
at present these approaches are more evident in the planning literature than in
practice and it remains to be demonstrated whether these new approaches can
fully address the problems facing cities in the twenty-first century.
Planning, regeneration and urban policy • 127
Planning visions
In his wide-ranging history of planning, Peter Hall (2002) notes that much of
the planning carried out in the world’s cities during the twentieth and early
twenty-first centuries has stemmed from the ideas of a few early visionaries
from the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Many of these sought to
provide visions of the ‘good city’ which would provide a better, more ordered
environment than the nineteenth century industrial city. These visionaries are
viewed as the founding fathers of modern urban planning; as Hall notes, there
were very few founding mothers, a gender imbalance that has continued within
planning professions (Greed 1994). These visionaries also emanated principally
from Europe and North America, and their visions for the city and urban life
consequently stem from these specific temporal, spatial and personal contexts.
This has often created problems when their ideas were translated into quite
different places and circumstances from those originally envisaged by their
originators.
Think about which elements and activities with your background and values in relation
you would include in your city and how you to those you are discussing your ideas with?
would arrange these. When you have
Now read on through the rest of this section
developed your list of attributes, or perhaps
about visions. When you have read through
even a plan or design, share your ideas with
it, go back and further reflect on whether
your friends, family or fellow students. Do
the issues raised about other urban visions
they agree with your vision or not? Think
are reflected in the discussions about your
about which elements are agreed on and
vision. What issues does this raise about
which are more contentious and why this
the problems facing those who seek to plan
might be – does this have anything to do
the future city?
While it is difficult to single out ideas and individuals from the myriad planning
visions and visionaries, a short overview such as this must do so. There are
perhaps two key city visions from the early twentieth century that have echoed
most down the decades in urban planning and which have had the most far-
reaching global impact on ideas for the reordering of cities; ‘the city in the garden’
and ‘the city of towers’, as Hall (2002) labels them.
128 • Themes
Howard’s vision was published first in 1898 under the title Tomorrow: A Peaceful
Path to Real Reform and was reissued in 1902 with the title Garden Cities of
Tomorrow. In Howard’s vision, agricultural land would be purchased at a low
price, with a self-governing community owning the land, building the homes and
developing the businesses in the garden city and with the community benefiting
from the increased land value arising from development, which would be used to
further develop the community. The success of Howard’s vision lay in both his
ability to concisely convey his ideas and in his provision of both ideas and the
practical means to achieve them. Howard’s ideas are neatly expressed in a series
of diagrams that appear in his book. The key diagrammatic expression of the
vision took the form of a social city (figure 6.2), a decentralized network of
garden cities of about 32,000 people surrounding a larger central city of about
58,000 people. These cities were to be separated by extensive areas of green
space but also connected by transport networks. In their detailed layout, the
garden cities would have abundant open space within them, wide boulevards,
the functional separation of industry, good quality housing, and a range of social
facilities.
Howard’s ideas became the basis for a wider movement and in 1903 the
Garden City Association (GCA), founded by Howard in 1899, began its first
garden city in Letchworth in the UK, giving physical expression to Howard’s
ideas. Raymond Unwin and Barry Parker were appointed as architects at
Letchworth and their designs, based on the building styles developed by the
Arts and Crafts Movement, were particularly influential in giving the
garden city its three-dimensional form (figure 6.3). Their style looked back
to lessons from the past, particularly medieval town building traditions and
village designs.
The garden city idea proved an important foundation for early urban planning
movements and Howard’s ideas were widely disseminated both in the UK and
more widely across Europe, North America, Japan and Australia, with many
countries creating their own garden city associations (Ward 2004). In addition,
Planning, regeneration and urban policy • 129
Unwin and Parker disseminated many of their ideas through their co-operation
on schemes in other countries, through the production of pattern books of their
designs and through their involvement in government planning and housing
committees in the UK (Hall 2002). Many of their ideas became blueprints for
other planning schemes, including their holistic approach to urban design and
their use of design elements such as open space, the clear zoning of functions
and road layouts including pedestrian ways and cul-de-sacs. In the US, Clarence
Stein and Henry Wright developed the garden city idea in their design for
130 • Themes
Radburn, New Jersey in 1928 in collaboration with Unwin. Key ideas to emerge
from this design were those of the neighbourhood unit, with groups of housing
clustered around community facilities, and the separation of through traffic
and local traffic, with neighbourhood areas arranged around cul-de-sacs and
bicycle and pedestrian routes. This arrangement was widely copied around
the world and became somewhat of a standard in the design of new towns.
In the post-Second World War period, garden city layouts and designs were
revived and widely utilized, for new capitals in newly independent post-colonial
countries, for new towns in European countries and for speculative planned
community developments, particularly in the US (Hall 2002).
Despite its widespread adoption, the garden city concept has often been
criticized for promoting an anti-urban vision of low density suburban and
small-town living. However, many of the developments subsequently promoted
under the banner of the ‘garden city’ were little more than suburbs, designed as
urban extensions and commuter zones linked to the main city and composed
mainly of housing, far removed from the free-standing, self-governing
communities envisaged by Howard (Hall 2002). These garden suburbs often
lacked any commercial functions and became principally middle class
Planning, regeneration and urban policy • 131
By the end of the 1960s the tide was turning against clearance, modernism
and grand planning. Within many cities in Europe and North America, the
masterplans and comprehensive clearance schemes proposed by planners were
increasingly opposed by local populations and local pressure groups seeking to
defend their neighbourhoods. Significantly, in the US, the threat of clearance
to Jane Jacobs’ neighbourhood in New York prompted her to embark on a
successful campaign to defend the neighbourhood and also resulted in the
publication of the book The Death and Life of Great American Cities (1961),
which offered the ‘right message at the right time’ (Hall 2002: 254) and became
one of the most influential books in city planning. Jacobs criticized the great
planning orthodoxies of the time, both the egotism of the Corbusian designers
and the perceived paternalism and anti-urbanism of the garden city movement.
The critiques stimulated by Jacobs undermined the certainty (she would have
said arrogance), of ideas stemming from these urban visions, questioning the
‘state bulldozer’ approach to planning and the idea of planners and designers as
the all-knowing experts.
Jacobs’ view of the city was one from below, from the street, rather than the
Corbusian architect-planners view from above. Her urbanism celebrated
136 • Themes
the traditional inner-city neighbourhood, arguing that there was nothing wrong
with high densities as long as there was no overcrowding. Jacobs’ four principles
for good neighbourhoods included mixed uses, mixed blocks with buildings of
different age and condition, conventional streets with short blocks and numerous
corners and a dense concentration of people, all to encourage a lively and
diverse community. These ideas have been influential in the development of
‘new urbanism’, an approach to planning that is opposed to the growth patterns
of cities exemplified by urban sprawl and restrictive residential enclaves
(Gottdiener and Budd 2005). However, the urbanism proposed by Jacobs
and the new urbanists has perhaps proved just as susceptible as modernism to
having its egalitarian impulses subordinated to capitalist development interests.
In hindsight, calls to abandon clean-sweep planning and preserve the diverse
qualities of older established neighbourhoods have underpinned the subsequent
transformation of many inner-city neighbourhoods through gentrification.
Equally, many are critical of ideas that seem to suggest that idealized visions
of community life can be easily mapped on to larger cities, to solve urban
problems and create harmonious environments merely through design rather
than through addressing more fundamental socio-economic problems
(Gottdiener and Budd 2005).
Overall, the real criticism of the legacy of these urban visions is of design
solutions laid down on people without regard to their preferences and ways of
life. Professional planners and designers had no real feel for the way ordinary
working families lived and the problems resulting from the application of
abstract design ideas on various urban populations provides an important lesson
for future generations of planners. However, this is not solely the problem of
the planners and designers but is also linked to the wider realities of urban
development processes. As Cochrane (1999: 313) notes, ‘the grand visions of
the utopian urbanists were translated into urban practice in a series of grey,
day-to-day piecemeal decisions, driven by the priorities of developers and the
exigencies of budgetary constraint’.
Finally, these critiques highlight the fundamental issue of whether the unruliness
of the city can or should be ordered by rational planning interventions. A key
question is whether the disorderly city is necessarily bad, or whether disorder
might enhance a city’s character. For Jacobs, ‘good’ disorder was an important
part of the vitality and creativity of urban life. This links to the development of
new attitudes to planning and conflict, exemplified in the writings of Leonie
Sandercock (1998; see also chapters seven and eight). She argues that planning
needs to be conscious of the politics of difference and diversity and that planning
should be a ‘messy’ discourse of contestation and discussion rather than an
imposed blueprint. Again these ideas exist more on paper than in the reality of
planning cities today, although they have been developed through a number
of radical planning approaches (Miles 2008). The key point here, however, is
Planning, regeneration and urban policy • 137
how order and disorder are defined and by whom, acknowledging that there will
be many different ideas about what these might be, and that the power to impose
these ideas is unequally distributed in the city.
Complex issues surround the protection of within the racially heterogeneous state of
urban heritage in the multi-cultural and fast Singapore, both to local citizens and to
changing city-state of Singapore. Singapore outside visitors who are told through
is better known for its rapid modernization, brochures and other tourist media to expect
industrialization and rapidly changing urban a kaleidoscope of different vibrant cultures
landscape, resulting from its key role in the that are united as Singaporean.
economically dynamic Asia-Pacific region.
Henderson’s (2008) article focuses on
It has only recently adopted policies to
the district known as ‘Little India’ within
encourage building conservation and the
Singapore which has traditionally been
protection and use of its cultural heritage.
a centre for the city’s Indian ethnic
In 1989 a conservation masterplan was
communities. The enclave was designated
developed which designated a number of
an Historic District because of its
ethnic enclaves as Historic Districts. For
significance as a centre representing the
the government, protection of this ethnic
long term presence of these Indian ethnic
heritage through the conservation and
communities within Singapore, and it
refurbishment of buildings of historical and
remains a leisure and commercial space for
architectural significance serves to promote
these groups. However, a range of other
ideas of harmony and multi-culturalism
Planning, regeneration and urban policy • 141
continued
groups have a ‘stake’ in the area, including seen to have undermined the original
migrant workers from the Indian sub- character of the area. Rising rents have seen
continent, who use it as a meeting place at many original businesses replaced by
weekends and a source of traditional themed businesses operated by groups
products, tourists, government agencies and beyond the local Indian community, although
private businesses. The author notes that this has not been as extensive as in some of
these ethnic urban enclaves are therefore the other Historic Districts, particularly
complex entities which serve multiple Chinatown.
purposes and which are used in various
A key tension therefore is the pressure for
ways by different groups. These multiple
change against that for preservation and
meanings and uses serve to highlight the
continuity which remains a fundamental
contested nature of urban heritage
issue for urban heritage management to
management. A key concern has been the
address. However, within this, activities
impact of alterations to the townscape and
such as tourist development do not sit
commercial and residential life resulting
easily on one side or the other but rather
from tourist-led developments. Here there is
can be seen as acting as instruments for
a concern that the authenticity of the district
both change and conservation, and which
is being eroded, and its meaning lost for
can therefore create mixed reactions from
both locals and visitors. While
local stakeholders to proposed plans.
redevelopment activities seek to promote an
Indian theme, many developments can be Source: Henderson (2008)
The rise of urban conservation and heritage concerns has thus had an important
impact on the development trajectory of many of the world’s cities. Many cities
now have large parts of their urban areas, the cores in particular, protected in
some way. This has generated considerable debate over the style of new
development within these areas. The desire to preserve and enhance their
character has been seen to have encouraged the use of contextual designs for
new developments and the use of revival styles and pastiche architecture (see
also chapter eight). While many architects and planners applaud the use of these
styles, others claim that the overuse of bland conservation-area-architecture and
absence of modern architecture in these areas is stifling urban change and the
development of cities. Property owners, developers and architects can view
conservation controls as an unnecessary burden and an infringement of property
development rights. Equally, the need for new buildings to meet modern
business needs juxtaposed against the desire for conservation often produces
uneasy compromises through the planning process, most graphically illustrated
by façadism where the fronts of old buildings are retained with new
development behind (Larkham and Barrett 1998). The need for conservation
within the planning and management of cities has clearly placed new demands
on both the planning and development professions. In particular, the ability to
negotiate good schemes that harmoniously and profitably blend the old and the
new requires specialist skills and knowledge that are often lacking in urban
142 • Themes
of these goals. For example, at times policies whose explicit aim is economic
development, have been advocated on the basis that they will also lead to
improvements in the quality of life within localities undergoing regeneration
(as in the case of the Urban Development Corporations in the UK in the
1980s and 1990s). Finally, the relative emphasis on the goals of regeneration
has shifted over time. For example, it is only since the early 1990s that
environmental sustainability has risen substantially up many urban policy
agendas. Below we outline a framework to guide analysis of either specific
projects of urban regeneration or the more general policies or programmes of
which they are part. Depending on the focus of any study and upon the nature
of the case being examined, not all questions will be relevant in every case.
However, they highlight a number of key themes and issues to consider in the
interrogation of urban policy and regeneration schemes.
●● What urban problem, or problems, have ●● Who are the stakeholders involved?
been identified? ●● What are the relationships between the
●● What has been identified as the cause of stakeholders?
the problem or problems?
Impacts of regeneration
Funding
●● What are the impacts of the policy/
●● Where does the funding for the policy/ programme/project?
programme/project come from? ●● In what ways has the policy/programme/
●● In what way is funding allocated? project been evaluated?
144 • Themes
Urban problems
Policy contexts
Henderson et al.’s (2007) study examines government urban policies are mediated by
the role of the local state in the specific local contexts. They suggest that
regeneration in the English city of Salford. rather than wiping the slate clean, new
They consider the idea of ‘actually occurring regeneration initiatives are layered on to
regeneration’ where broader central geographical areas that are made up of
148 • Themes
continued
existing actors, who will exhibit different were awarded funding as they were viewed
responses to policies, historical relations as able to deliver initiatives, as a result of
and past layers of policy and that as a past successes, and because they adopted
consequence the implementation of new an entrepreneurial stance and aspirational
policies is never straightforward. In masterplan for the docks which chimed with
particular they note the influence of past national government regeneration ideas.
relations between local government and Development was driven by the ‘vision’ of
central government, the market and the key city council officers and consultants and
community in shaping the ways in which new can therefore be viewed as top-down, with
initiatives are received and implemented little meaningful input from the local
(what they term path dependencies). business community or local residents. The
authors argue that this created a particular
They examine these ideas in a case study
path dependency which shaped subsequent
of the role of Salford City Council in the
city council responses to the changing urban
redevelopment of the inner area of the city
policy context and the development of new
over a twenty-five year period from the early
initiatives. This fed through into the use of
1980s. The city is seen as exemplifying
similar approaches in the development of
many of the persistent problems associated
larger regeneration schemes, specifically the
with the deindustrialization of former
Lowry Arts Centre in the 1990s and the
manufacturing cities (see chapter four).
approval for an Urban Regeneration
However, the local city council was viewed
Company (URC) in 2005 seeking the
as unusual in the English context in its
regeneration of a larger part of inner Salford.
willingness and ability to attract national
However, lack of earlier community
urban policy expenditure. The most
engagement has created negative path
prestigious development was the
dependencies where local communities have
transformation of the former docks into
become sceptical about the benefits
the Salford Quays development, although
regeneration schemes will bring to their
this was only one part of the council’s wider
lives, particularly in terms of the job
regeneration programme.
opportunities created. Consequently, there is
In seeking funding for the regeneration of the a difficulty in engaging the local community
docks the local council initially adopted a despite the requirement for more community
‘pragmatic’ approach, being prepared to involvement specified in recent central
engage with neo-liberal market orientated government urban policy initiatives such as
central government initiatives, despite their the URC.
desire for local-state led development. Source: Henderson, S. Bowlby, S. and Raco, M. (2007)
Despite this central-local tension, the council
Urban policy and regeneration initiatives can achieve their aims through
interventions in a number of dimensions of localities. These include their
natural environment, built environment, local social networks, economy,
regulatory framework (including local planning regulations and taxes) and
Planning, regeneration and urban policy • 149
areas in which the impact of urban policy has been significant, and also the
persistence of long term seemingly deeply embedded urban problems where
urban policy has, on a large scale at least, appeared to make less of an
impression. Michael Carley, writing about the impacts of urban policy on
deindustrialized cities in the UK, argues that their regeneration has been partial:
‘while the nation has become better at property-led regeneration, it has not
cracked the hard nut of helping households disadvantaged by long-term
unemployment or the inability to work’ (Carley 2000: 273). A similar view
could be taken of policy initiatives undertaken in urban areas in other European
countries, the US and other parts of the world. As Cochrane (2007: 4) notes,
acknowledgement of the lack of success of urban policies in achieving their
stated or implicit aims is an unfortunate area of seeming consensus among
academics and professions.
Future challenges
It is perhaps too harsh a statement to say that urban planning and policy is in
crisis at the beginning of the twenty-first century, although it is perhaps fair to
say that there is some debate and disagreement around the directions we should
be going in the future. The twentieth century ended with a certain amount of
disillusionment over the abilities of urban planning and policy to deal with the
ills of the city. Despite over one hundred years of intervention, in the case of
some of the older industrial cities of the west, problems of urban poverty have
proved impossible to eradicate. Equally, the growth of the new megacities
of the Global South has thrown up new urban challenges. Hall (2002)
contends that we are perhaps back where we started in trying to deal with the
concentration of problems in the giant city. However, the global context for
addressing these problems is clearly different from the early twentieth century.
There is, however, a certain agreement around the urban challenges facing us in
the twenty-first century. Equally, despite the range of caveats considered above,
there appears to be a continued commitment to a role for urban planning and
urban policy in addressing these challenges. UN-HABITAT (2009: xxii–xxiii)
identifies five main challenges for urban planning and policy to deal with. First,
there are demographic challenges, particularly the problems associated with
rapid urban population growth within the world’s megacities. Second, there are
environmental challenges, specifically issues associated with climate change
and the declining availability of resources, particularly fossil fuels (see also
chapter thirteen). Third, there are economic challenges resulting from the
impacts of global economic restructuring and economic crises on city
economies and urban labour markets. Fourth, there are socio-spatial challenges,
specifically the increasing social and spatial polarization of urban populations
Planning, regeneration and urban policy • 151
for some the capturing of the urban by the agenda of neo-liberalism and
competitiveness is equally problematic, offering a further straitjacket that is
neither locally responsive nor inclusive (Peck and Tickell 2002). Alternative
policy visions based on the potential of cities to provide a platform for social
and political engagement and to foster participation and the negotiation of
issues among urban societies remain mainly the preserve of academic writing
(see Sandercock 2000; Amin and Thrift 2002; Healey 2004). The challenge
remains to illustrate whether small scale experimental initiatives adopting
these approaches can be developed into mechanisms and practices that can
empower urban populations to meet the challenges facing cities in the twenty-
first century.
Summary
This chapter has sought to provide an overview of the role of urban planning
and policy in shaping the city and in mitigating the problems within cities.
Both urban planning and urban policy are difficult terms to define and in
practice they encompass a broad range of issues, approaches, agents and
activities which have varied over both time and space. Cities have been
viewed as unruly places that need to be managed, and in the nineteenth century
the rise of large cities presented problems and challenges that urban managers
sought to mitigate. Urban visions of the ‘good city’ developed by a number of
key thinkers drove the development of the modern urban planning profession
in the twentieth century. However, by the end of the twentieth century the
rise of new economic and social challenges facing cities, and disillusionment
with the approaches employed by planning and in its ability to solve urban
problems, led to the reconsideration of planning and policy agendas. In the
late twentieth century, key changes have been a move from comprehensive
redevelopment to greater conservation and rehabilitation of urban environments
and a shift from social problems to economic competition as a focus for urban
policy. In the twenty-first century the key challenges facing urban managers
are sustainability, economic competition, social polarization and demographic
shifts. The challenge for urban planning and policy organizations is to develop
approaches to tackling these issues that are both locally responsive and socially
inclusive.
Follow-up activities
An effective answer would highlight the problems facing cities in the twenty-first
century and provide an overview of the different planning and policy approaches
applied to address these issues over time. In particular it would highlight the
increasing significance of policies aimed at making cities competitive for urban
planning and policy agendas and comment on whether this is a necessary and
desirable approach for urban managers to adopt. An excellent answer would
move beyond this to consider the deeply contested nature of urban planning
and policy approaches and would critically consider the issues surrounding the
application and impacts of policies, the wider structural constraints on policy
makers and the influence of local ‘path dependencies’ in shaping ‘actually
occurring regeneration’, highlighting the significance of local contexts.
Project idea
Further reading
Books
● Bandarin, F. and van Oers, R. (2012) The Historic Urban Landscape: Managing
Heritage in an Urban Century, Chichester: Wiley Blackwell
Offers a comprehensive overview of the intellectual developments in urban
conservation and management of historic landscapes, drawing on examples from
around the world.
● Couch, C. (2016) Urban Planning: An Introduction, London: Palgrave
Macmillan
Student friendly introductory text on urban planning. Wide-ranging and
internationally-focused, it addresses a range of key urban issues currently facing
planners.
● Edwards, C. and Imrie, R. (2015) The Short Guide to Urban Policy, Bristol:
Policy Press
154 • Themes
Concise, but wide-ranging book which critically examines the multiple ways in
which urban problems have been defined and addressed in different places at
different times.
● Fainstein, S.S. and DeFilippis, J. (eds) (2016) Readings in Planning Theory,
4th edn, Chichester: John Wiley & Sons
A classic edited collection providing a range of key readings about planning
ideas and approaches.
● Hall, P. (2014) Cities of Tomorrow: An Intellectual History of Urban Planning
and Design since 1880, 4th edn, Chichester: John Wiley & Sons
A classic overview of the development of modern planning traditions and the
people behind urban visions of ‘the good city’. Reflective and critical in
considering these legacies.
● UN-HABITAT (2009) Planning Sustainable Cities, London: Earthscan
Provides a comprehensive review of the development and practice of urban
planning around the world and reviews some of the key challenges for cities and
urban planning as a profession in the twenty-first century.
Journal article
Websites
your own field research in this area. Before we pursue this though it is worth
pausing and considering the reasons for the growth in interest in the cultural
aspects of cities. Broadly we can attribute this to a series of changes that were
occurring across cities and within academic disciplines that can be gathered
together in their different ways under the banner of post-modernism.
Culture seemed to become much more central to understanding processes
of urban change than had previously been the case. This centrality of
culture to urban change has been manifest in a number of ways. First are
apparent changes to the social geographies of cities and the implications that
these changes have for the cultural landscape of urban areas. It is an almost
universal characteristic of contemporary cities that their social geographies
are marked by greater cultural diversity and an intensification of juxtapositions
of difference than was the case in the past (Zukin 1995; Watson 1999;
see chapter five). The collages of diversity that characterize contemporary cities
are composed of different cultural groups each with differing combinations of
norms, values and lifestyles. This is a reflection of the fact that ‘publics have
become more mobile and diverse’ (Zukin 1995: 3) than has been the case in the
past. This increased cultural diversity brings with it the potential for change,
the emergence of new ideas, identities and ways of living but, at the same time,
for new forms of conflict to emerge in the city. The challenges posed by and
potentials of the greater cultural diversity of contemporary cities have risen
sharply up both political and academic agendas (Sandercock 1998, 2003;
Binnie et al. 2006).
On another level culture appears to be becoming increasingly significant to
the development and planning of cities and to their economies. We have seen,
for example, the revalorization of many urban spaces through various forms
of cultural ‘labelling’. These have been crucial dimensions of the extensive
physical redevelopment of cities in the last thirty years. We can recognize,
for example, the increasing importance of image to processes of urban change,
most notably through the process of place promotion (which we discuss at
length in chapter nine). This has typically involved the reimagining of whole
cities through the composition of spectacular collages drawn from the inventory
of cities’ internal spaces and recast to fit in with prevailing fashions. Often
these are explicitly constructed around the supposed cultural resources of
cities, drawing on both aspects of high culture (opera, ballet, art galleries)
and sanitized aspects of popular culture. In addition to this, many physical
changes to urban landscapes have sought to emphasize or enhance their
cultural value. This includes the increasing deployment of spectacular
architecture and flagship developments across urban landscapes. Often
the focus of these developments is cultural, as in Barcelona’s Museum
of Contemporary Art (see chapter five) or Bilbao’s Guggenheim Museum (see
chapter eight). Heritage, the appropriation of aspects of the cultures of the past,
158 • Themes
has also emerged as a significant and much debated force shaping the
landscapes of contemporary cities (Jacobs 1992, 1996, 1999; Samuel 1994;
Wright 2009). Urban landscapes then have been re-dressed to emphasize
marketable aspects of their histories either to paying customers or the urban
citizenry more generally. Often, where it is thought that urban landscapes
lack enough marketable culture it has been injected or emphasized through
extensive programmes of public art (Hall 1997, 2003, 2007; Miles 1997).
These initiatives have been facilitated through shifts internationally in planning
practice and policy. Policies such as the designation of cultural quarters have
been designed to explicitly emphasize the cultural qualities and distinctiveness
of cities or spaces therein (Bell and Jayne 2004).
Culture seems also to have become increasingly central to processes of
economic change in the city. The cultural and creative industries have come
to play ever more significant roles in the economic development of cities
recently. Richard Florida (2002), an urban theorist who has undertaken
extensive research into the role of creativity in urban change, has labelled
this a transition between an industrial age and a creative age. It is estimated,
for example, that approximately forty per cent of people employed within
the UK and US economies now work in what might be classed as ‘creative’
industries (cited in McEwan 2008: 274). The definition of creative industries
is broad, encompassing the arts, media and science, but this emphasizes
the significance of knowledge, intelligence and cultural production to the
economies of urban spaces. Whereas once urban and economic geographers
looked at location and change in manufacturing industry and assessed its
significance to cities, now they are as likely, if not more so, to look at these
issues in relation to advertising, design, film making or the music industry
(Scott 1999, 2002; see also chapter four).
Recent changes in the social sciences have been in tune with the growing
importance of culture to understanding contemporary urban and social
change noted above. Broadly, grouped under the banner of the post-modern
challenge or critique, these disciplinary changes have highlighted the
potential of culture as a lens through which we might examine and understand
the world. This post-modern challenge to the social sciences has encompassed
issues around the social construction of knowledge, the plurality of voices,
knowledges and experiences characteristic of contemporary society and
their cultural groundedness. This has necessitated engagement with the
cultural plurality of the contemporary urban scene. This has been partly an
acknowledgement of the tendency of earlier accounts of the city to erase
or ignore this, partly a celebration and partly recognition of the potential
of alternative voices and perspectives to destabilize the meta-narratives
and totalizing accounts that had dominated earlier accounts of the city
(see Robinson 2002, 2005a).
Cities and culture • 159
The discussion above should have highlighted that culture is complex and
multi-faceted, meaning different things in different contexts. This complexity
has long been recognized by cultural theorists and noted, for example, by
Raymond Williams (1953, see also Deffner 2005). If, therefore, culture, in the
context of the city, can encompass everything from everyday practices such as
taking a pet dog for a walk to the construction of a new opera house, how can
we begin to make sense of it conceptually? Our starting point is the axiom that
has emerged from a long tradition of cultural analysis and research that culture
can be equated with ways of life. It is what people do, how different groups of
people do different, or perhaps similar, things. It is the norms and values that
people hold and the ways they are expressed through their lifestyles. The
cultural geographer James Duncan provides a useful definition:
Most people consider culture something that we simply ‘have’ because we
are born into a particular culture … that existed before we came into the
world and will continue long after we die. It is precisely this collective
quality of culture that makes it appear to be something external to us as
individuals. It can be argued, however, that it is analytically more useful to
think of culture as something that we actively (re)produce rather than
something external to us.
(Duncan 1999: 54)
We want to move now to look inside the Pandora’s Box of culture a little and
try to impose a little order on this seemingly amorphous realm. In the remainder
of this chapter we aim to consider the range of literature that has been produced
on urban culture but to do so by categorizing it into a number of themes. In
doing this we hope to outline the main dimensions of culture as manifest in an
urban context. This will provide you with a basis either to explore individual
aspects of urban culture or to examine the cultural geographies, in all their
diversity, of particular urban areas. We want to do this by considering five
domains of difference. These encompass the ways in which different cultural
groups are viewed or valued within society, the nature and development of
different cultures and cultural groups within cities, interaction between different
cultural groups, the relationship between cultural groups and the materiality of
the city and finally the relationship between cultural groups and issues of space,
scale and globalization.
The conceptual framework that we use to discuss culture is summarized in
table 7.1. Each of the domains of difference that it sketches out is discussed in
the subsequent sections in some detail. They all represent continuums between
two poles rather than mutually exclusive categories. Post-colonial critiques of
culture remind us that we should be wary of binary classifications of culture
160 • Themes
models, actors and musicians such as Alexa Chung, Sienna Miller, Kate Moss
and Zooey Deschanel (at the time of writing the ultimate embodiments of the
fashionable ‘boho-chic’ lifestyle/look). Cultural ‘others’, by contrast include
groups to whom this cachet is not attached or who are routinely demonized in
public, media or political discourse. Cultural studies of the city, particularly
those within sociology and British cultural studies, are replete with examples of
sub-cultures that have become the objects of moral panics, such as muggers,
mods and rockers, punks, as well as numerous ethnic minorities (Hebdige 1979;
Gelder 2005, 2007, see also Jackson 1989 for a distinctly geographical take on
this issue).
Exercise
Can you recognize contemporary cultural way? Does it translate into actions against
groups, subcultures or lifestyles that are them, for example, specific policies or
demonized? Monitor the media for a short policing measures? How are these groups
period and try to collect examples of this, manifest in an urban setting? Do you think
noting the characteristics of these groups these examples are unique to the current
and attitudes towards them. Why do you period or part of more historically deep
think these groups are demonized in this seated attitudes towards different groups?
When thinking about culture in the city we can also make a distinction
between the manufacture and manipulation of culture for some external
economic or social developmental end, and organic cultures. In some cases
the distinction between the two is clear cut and unproblematic. The building
of a new opera house, for example, is a case of the manufacture, or at least
manipulation of culture, the provision of finance or resources to promote the
development of that cultural activity. The motivation for the development
of cultural facilities such as this is often not just altruism or the belief that
classical music is inherently a good thing. Rather it might be bound up with
the cultural economy of the city, part of its cultural policy or strategy, whose
162 • Themes
aims are in part to boost the city’s economy through visitor spend and perhaps
to enhance its externally perceived image. On the other hand, groups of Latin
American immigrants who meet in public parks in cities such as Los Angeles
to play soccer (Hamilton and Chinchilla 2001), which over time become
formalized into leagues and associations is an example of a more organic
cultural formation. Its development is primarily not driven by any external
agency (although clearly, we should not be innocent of the globalization of
soccer and the commercial interests that are bound up in the promotion and
spread of the game around the world). In other cases though, the distinction is
less clear, less easy to make. Taking the case of gay men again, communities
may have grown up organically within specific city districts such as The
Castro in San Francisco, Chelsea in New York and around Canal Street
in Manchester, developing their own independent facilities, institutions
and events. However, at the point when a local authority recognizes the
contribution of its gay community to its economy and its externally perceived
image, and supports, subsidizes, promotes and expands its Pride festival, the
distinction between organic and manufactured culture blurs somewhat.
Organic cultures are those that tend to develop without the stimulus of any
external organizing institution, initiative or policy. The processes of migration
and the clustering of groups based upon some common characteristic such as
ethnicity or lifestyle can underpin to some extent the organic development
of cultures within cities. Essentially, these cultures arise from the bottom-up.
However, one should avoid the danger of romanticizing the autonomy and
agency of cultural groups. Few such groups, with the possible exception of
the super-rich (Beaverstock et al. 2004) are simply free to choose where they
might settle. The geography of cultural groups in the city is often the product of
the operation of power through the combined economy and bureaucracy
of the city along with wider social attitudes towards different groups of people.
The ethnic enclaves that grew up in British cities from the 1950s onwards,
for example, were not simply a reflection of the operation of mass choice
by these groups, rather they reflected the post-war boom in the industrial
economy that necessitated a supply of cheap manual labour. In addition,
this was complemented by institutional racism among a range of urban
gatekeepers, exemplified by the notorious practice of ‘redlining’ by mortgage
lenders (see chapter eleven). Similar racist attitudes were reflected in the
practices of local authorities and private landlords (Rex and Moore 1974; Rex
and Tomlinson 1979; Sarre 1986; see also chapters two and eleven). However,
the case study below of ultra-orthodox Jews living in Britain reminds us that
groups can also choose to draw boundaries around themselves as a form of
resistance or defence. Here again, then, it is important to look beyond the
surface of seemingly organic cultural formations and to excavate the processes
that gave rise to them.
Cities and culture • 163
of indifference across which very little intercultural dialogue takes place. This
represents a form of stasis in which cultural groups are predominantly inward
looking, little common cultural ground emerges between groups, few meaningful
cross-cultural institutions develop and little cross-cultural political capacity
emerges through which cities can be shaped in desirable ways. The challenge
facing these mongrel cities then is less concerned with stamping out intercultural
violence and hostility, desirable as this may be, and more with finding ways to
foster solidarity between different cultural groups (Calhoun 2002: 108, cited in
Sandercock 2006: 39). Richard Sennett’s work argues that this involves engaging
with ‘the challenge of living together not simply in tolerant indifference to each
other, but in active engagement’ (Sandercock 2006: 40).
Sandercock recognizes that some of the most useful pointers towards more
convivial futures for mongrel cities come from the work of Ash Amin (2002b).
She argues, for example, that Amin demolishes several popular policy responses
to the problem of fostering multi-culturalism. One such response involves the
promotion of intercultural encounters in the public spaces of the city. This is
typically manifest in design-led initiatives which aim to provide public spaces
within which the sense of the city as a shared resource can be fostered through
encounters between different cultural groups. In reality though, Sandercock
argues, drawing on Amin’s observations, this utopian potential is rarely realized:
The depressing reality, Amin counters, is that far from being spaces where
diversity is being negotiated, these spaces tend either to be territorialized by
particular groups (whites, youths, skateboarders, Asian families) or they are
spaces of transit, with very little contact between strangers.
(Sandercock 2006: 44)
Exercise
Do you think Sandercock is right to that ‘the city’s public spaces are not natural
characterize the public spaces of servants of multicultural engagement’
contemporary cities in this way? Undertake (2002: 11, cited in Sandercock 2006: 44)?
a period of observation of a prominent
Amin’s observations were made in the
urban public space. To what extent do your
context of British cities. To what extent do
observations mirror those of Sandercock
they apply to the public spaces of cities in
and Amin, above? Is the space dominated
other countries? If you get the opportunity,
by a single group or a number of groups with
undertake a comparative exercise in a
little or no contact between them? Is it used
non-British city. What differences do you
as a space of transit, and if so, what are the
observe from your original study? Do Amin’s
implications of this for the groups who use
observations apply here? How can you
it? On the basis of your observations, to
account for any differences that you observe?
what extent do you agree with Amin’s view
166 • Themes
continued
acts of resistance, a rejection of the outside way in which this disapproval was manifest
world. One such example is ultra-orthodox as well as the social distance they felt
Jews living in contemporary Britain. between themselves and their ultra-orthodox
neighbours. The activity patterns of ultra-
Roughly ten to fifteen per cent of British
orthodox residents reflect the inward
Jews are ultra-orthodox and they constitute
orientation of this community, with trips to
the fastest growing component of Jewry in
facilities beyond the neighbourhood kept
both Britain and worldwide. Valins (2003:
to a minimum or carefully managed. A
159) describes these groups:
number of ultra-orthodox Jews interviewed
These Jews are known for their articulated the importance to them of
traditional style of dress, their imposing socio-spatial boundaries between
stringent interpretations of ways themselves and wider society and resisting
of life inscribed in ancient, sacred mixing, integration and what they see as the
texts and their clear construction dilution of their identity. The recognition by
of socio-spatial boundaries to this community of a patch of ground that they
separate themselves from those see as distinctly ‘theirs’ is of vital importance
they consider to be ‘other’. to the preservation of their identity. One
respondent said:
Ultra-orthodox Jews in Broughton Park,
Manchester show distinctive residential in a sense we’ve got to enclose
clustering with some streets at the heart of ourselves within our own
the neighbourhood being entirely Jewish, while boundaries in order to protect, as
many others have over eighty per cent Jewish far as our children are concerned,
occupation. This residential distribution is in order to protect our children
mirrored in the locations of Jewish institutions from the influences of the rotten
within and around the area. society, of the immoral society
within which we live.
For these residents, the neighbourhood has (Valins 2003: 168)
a very clear identity linked to views of it as
middle class, well to do, and distinctly This case highlights the importance of
Jewish. This is in strong contrast to the boundaries that still exist at many scales
outside which is perceived as both despite some of the rhetoric attached to the
dangerous and morally decaying. When impacts of globalization. In the case of
asked, Jewish residents recognized clear ultra-orthodox Jews in Manchester, their
boundaries separating them from supposed boundary building and maintaining practices
‘others’ outside and often articulated the can be seen as a form of resistance to
identity of the area in terms of it being an modernity and what they see as its
‘island of decency’ (Valins 2003: 168). pernicious influences. For this community
Within the neighbourhood strict orthodox the rejection of diversity, mixing and
practices are adhered to by the majority of hybridity are important ways in which their
residents and instances where these are identities are stabilized and the processes
breached are strongly disapproved of. of modernity slowed down. All of this is
Non-orthodox Jews when interviewed crucially grounded and brought together
mentioned the practice of being stared at within a specific, identifiable location.
when driving their car on the Sabbath as one Source: Valins (2003)
Cities and culture • 169
The example above of the gated residential enclaves of some very wealthy
groups remind us of two things about the relationship between culture and the
materiality of the city. The first is that the urban landscape is a reflection of the
cultural norms, values and sometimes fears of the groups who produce, occupy
and use the city. This idea of the ‘city as text’ is one that we have explored in
some detail elsewhere (chapter eight; see also Bender 1993; Robertson and
Richards 2003; Wylie 2007). However, more specifically it reminds us that the
cultures of some groups are more ‘artefactual’ than others. In other words, the
lifestyles of some groups are more reflected in the urban landscape, or in other
material artefacts of the city, than those of others. We might think of the former
as cultures that are relatively material. By contrast some cultures are much less
associated with tangible, material artefacts, more with ways of life or social
practices. Such cultures are reflected much less in the urban landscape. This is
not to deny that they make an impression on the materiality of the city but
that this impression might be through relatively minor modifications to the
landscape such as posters, graffiti, signs and decoration rather than through
plans, buildings, monuments and so on. These differences have a great deal to
do with the relative power of these different groups. The latter groups we might
refer to as less material cultures or as more immaterial. We do not mean this in
the sense that these groups are not important, far from it, rather, that they are
cultures less embedded in the material landscapes of the city (see case study).
The relationship between culture and into the area from the early eighteenth
materiality, and some of the conflicts that century onwards from, variously, France,
are bound up around this, are clearly Ireland, Poland, Russia and more recently
demonstrated in the case of heritage. Bangladesh. The plans for the ongoing
Jane M. Jacobs (1992, 1996, 1999) has redevelopment of the area in the 1990s
provided detailed commentaries on conflicts selectively incorporated distinctive
involving a range of cultural groups around architectural forms that existed in the area
the redevelopment of the Spitalfields area of and which were closely associated with
East London during the 1990s. Spitalfields some aspects of the area’s rich history.
was a deprived part of the East End of However, some cultural groups, despite
London where pressure for development having a long-standing presence in
came from its proximity to the expanding Spitalfields, whose histories were less
financial centre in the City of London. It is artefactual, tended to become marginalized
home to a range of different cultural groups within the ongoing redevelopment of the
linked to waves of immigration that came area. For example, while Spitalfields’
170 • Themes
continued
their histories in artefacts in the landscape
and hence could gain little purchase within
this conflict and were disempowered
within the processes of conservation
and development, having little chance to
influence them.
The tendency for some cultural groups, whose histories are not so artefactual,
to be written out of the urban landscape has prompted responses from artists
and artist groups internationally. There are many examples where artists have
attempted to address this by making visible, through the creation of various
artefacts, the histories of relatively disempowered groups whose cultures leave
little material trace on the urban landscape. The ‘Power of Place’, a multi-media
group who have worked mainly in Los Angeles, have sought to create such
alternative monuments, not to the powerful individuals who tend to dominate
the monumental landscape of cities, but rather to more humble groups from the
city’s past. One example is the monument they created in the Little Tokyo area
of Los Angeles to Biddy Mason, a black ex-slave and midwife (Hayden 1995;
Cities and culture • 171
Miles 1997). The monument commemorates the life of Biddy Mason but also
provides a material artefact for an otherwise invisible cultural group. This and
other monuments have subsequently become incorporated into the conservation
of this historic district. This is in sharp contrast to the more exclusionary heritage
based redevelopment of Spitalfields. A similar example is Suzanne Lacy’s ‘Full
Circle’ project in Chicago (Lacy 1994). This involved the installation of one
hundred rock monuments in central Chicago, each one commemorating the life
of a Chicago area woman. It provided both a counterpoint to the masculinity of
the city’s existing monuments and again represented an attempt to memorialize in
material form a group whose cultures tend to be more domestic than public, more
associated with a set of social practices than material public objects.
Local/global
multiple and complex ways within local contexts. Finally, we want to talk about
the ways in which this is manifest in the spaces of the city.
There are many arguments and examples that run counter to the myth that
cultural homogenization is an inevitable outcome of globalization (Hall 2007).
Globalization, for example, is not as complete a process as is often supposed.
The penetration of multi-national companies, while being very extensive
globally, is in reality uneven and incomplete. Further, globalization, although it
may sometimes seem so, is not a monolithic process stemming solely from the
Global North. There are a number of contemporary globalizations associated,
for example, with major world religions such as Judaism, Christianity and Islam
and those linked to international diasporas such as that of the global Chinese
community (McEwan 2008: 278). It is wrong, therefore, to equate globalization
solely with economic processes exclusively from the Global North. Processes
of globalization then are more complex and diverse than is sometimes
supposed.
There can be a tendency to represent global and local cultures and cultural
processes in very simplistic terms. There is a tendency to portray global
cultures as powerful, dominant and destructive of local cultures. By contrast
local cultures can be seen as weak or vulnerable. As with all mythologies
there is some truth in these characterizations but they are a significant
oversimplification and miss some of the key ways in which the global and
local mix in the spaces of the city. The interactions of global and local cultures
within these spaces are complex and multiple. We would not suggest that this
interaction should be studied by attempting to weigh up the balance of global or
local or to determine which is dominant. We would argue that in all spaces of
the city there will be elements of global and local cultures present. The key is to
understand these presences and their interactions within local contexts.
The approach that we advocate here is best demonstrated with reference to a
brief example. Elsewhere we have discussed Barcelona’s Museum of
Contemporary Art (MACBA) and the impacts its development had on the
neighbourhood of El Raval within which it is situated (see chapter five). In that
discussion, it could be argued that we are guilty of solely presenting MACBA
as an agent of cultural globalization, arguing that its development was a catalyst
to the gentrification of the neighbourhood. In turn, we suggested, this has
lead to the partial eradication of El Raval’s cultural diversity and architectural
distinctiveness and its replacement with a form of international style modernism
that was, primarily, a space within the global circuit of commerce of art. While
we are not arguing anything contrary to this interpretation here, we would
like to extend this discussion a little. A closer reading of the development of
MACBA reveals a more complex mixture of a range of global, regional and
local cultures within the space of MACBA and its surroundings.
Cities and culture • 173
Figures 7.2a and 7.2b An improvised game of cricket in the Plaça Ángels adjacent to
MACBA
Source: Author’s photographs
Cities and culture • 175
Figure 7.3b L’esperit català, Antoni Tàpies (1971) based on the Catalan flag
Source: © VEGAP, Madrid and DACS, London (2011)
176 • Themes
simply a question of the role of art in alliance with regeneration and capital,
actually involves an appreciation of the interactions of numerous local, civic,
regional, national and global cultures.
Summary
Follow-up activities
Essay title: ‘The cultural geographies of the contemporary city are ones of
tolerant indifference.’ Discuss with reference to examples.
The question draws on the assertion made within the work of Sandercock and
Amin, discussed above, that the contemporary, culturally diverse, ‘mongrel city’
is one lacking in collective civic culture. A successful response to this question
requires an evaluation of this statement drawing on evidence from a variety of
cities internationally. The answer might begin by exploring examples of cities
where the statement appears to hold true. These might include the cities of
contemporary Britain, from which Amin’s view derives, and car-based cities,
such as Los Angeles and Perth in Australia, where the spaces and opportunities
for public culture have been significantly undercut by the dependence on
car-based mobility. It might then consider evidence from cities that seems to
challenge the assertion in the question. These might include cities such as
New York and cities of Mediterranean Europe which appear to have more
vibrant public cultures. In evaluating the evidence from the latter cases, the
answer would ponder the extent to which the appearance of a lively public
culture in these cities equates to greater cross-cultural dialogue or the extent to
Cities and culture • 177
which the public cultures of these cities are still culturally segmented. An
excellent answer would extend this by critically considering policy routes to
promoting civic culture in contemporary cities around the world.
Project idea
Select an urban area you have easy access descriptively. For example, you may wish to
to. Spend time in your chosen location and record in depth the ways that the issues you
observe it as closely as you can. Think investigate are manifest in the area you are
about the dimensions of culture that are investigating. Produce a photographic report
explored within this chapter. Which of these to represent the findings of your research.
can you detect in your selected location? In
When you have done this reflect on the
what ways are these manifest (grounded)
strengths and weaknesses of using
in your selected location?
photography as a method of research
Select one of these dimensions of culture compared to other non-visual research
that emerge from your initial survey and methods.
explore it in more detail within your selected
For discussions of photographic and other
location using photographic research
visual research methods see Pink (2001);
methods. The aim is to use photography in
Knowles and Sweetman (2004); Rose
a critical, investigative way rather than
(2006); and Hall (2009b).
Further reading
Books
Extensive collection including classic key readings and lesser known works
encompassing a number of aspects of city cultures.
Journal articles
● Barnes, T. (2003) ‘The ’90s show: culture leaves the farm and hits the streets’,
Urban Geography, 24(6): 479–492
Discusses the initially reluctant but eventually enthusiastic embrace of culture
by urban geography. A good starting point for investigating urban cultural
geography.
● Borer, M.I. (2006) ‘The location of culture: the urban culturalist perspective’,
City and Community, 5(2): 173–197
Cities and culture • 179
Introduction
What is architecture?
another that has been designed and constructed by someone with a particular
purpose in mind. But are all buildings classed as ‘architecture’? For Nikolaus
Pevsner (1943), the great chronicler of British architectural traditions,
architecture was an art and was associated with the design of great buildings
(in Europe) rather than ordinary ones. This is a quite traditional, restricted and
Eurocentric view of what constitutes architecture which ignores many everyday
buildings and indigenous building traditions, or vernacular architectural
traditions as they are known. Although Pevsner expressed this view over seventy
years ago, many have pointed to a continuing preoccupation in architectural
writing with special or iconic buildings rather than those that are part of most
people’s everyday environments (Samuels 2010). However, some more recent
chroniclers of the development of architecture have adopted broader definitions
and include everything which is built (see, for example, Kostof 1995). Indeed,
some have even suggested that the definition of what constitutes architecture
could be extended to include structures from the non-human world such as ant
hills (Hersey 1999).
Architecture first evolved out of the dynamics between human needs (shelter,
security, worship, etc.) and means (available building materials and skills).
Until the technological developments of the twentieth century, there have been
two principal ways of building, either employing a frame or skeleton covered
with a skin or by putting one block on top of another. These techniques are used
around the world for building, with variations in building forms developing
from these basic principles, linked to the differing needs of users. Additionally,
variations in early building styles resulted from the use of different materials.
Around the world a wide variety of materials have been, and are still, used for
building, including stone, clay, wood, skins, grass, leaves, sand and water. Those
materials that were readily available have therefore had a profound effect on
early architectural forms, producing a wide variety of building traditions around
the world which have played an important role in the development of place
identities. Through processes of trial and error, improvisation or the replication
of successful building types, local architectural traditions developed. These
traditions continue to be produced in many parts of the world, and vernacular
buildings continue to make up an important proportion of the built world that
people experience every day (Oliver 2006). However, as Abel (2004) notes,
increasingly in the modern urban age there are relatively few examples of truly
indigenous architecture with many styles influenced by cross-cultural contact.
Gradually, societies developed and formalized their building knowledge,
initially through oral traditions and then via written codes of architecture and
Architecture • 185
Figure 8.1 Worcester Cathedral (early English Gothic) (left) and Law Courts (classical
Palladian) (above)
Source: Author’s photographs
186 • Issues
than the new cultural clothing of advanced capitalism designed to enhance, or,
for the more cynical commentators, mask large corporate urban redevelopment
projects (see Harvey 1989a). A key point about architecture that emerges from
this discussion and the quotations below (figure 8.3) is that architecture is very
much a product of a particular time, place and people and that architectural
works can be perceived as potent cultural and political symbols. Indeed,
societies are often defined by their surviving architectural achievements,
and ages or epochs become characterized by particular architectural styles
(Knox and Pinch 2010). Critically, this point also highlights the controversial
and contested nature of architecture, in that buildings can arouse great passions
188 • Issues
"(An) Institution for the general advancement of Civil Architecture, and for promoting and
facilitating the acquirement of the knowledge of the various arts and sciences connected
therewith; it being an art esteemed and encouraged in all enlightened nations, as tending
greatly to promote the domestic convenience of citizens, and the public improvement and
embellishment of towns and cities ... " (Charter of the Royal Institute of British Architects 1837)
"(Architecture) provides a key to the habits, thoughts and aspirations of the people and
without a knowledge of this art the history of any period lacks that human interest with which
it should be invested". (Bannister-Fletcher first published 1896 (20th edition 1996, xxv)
" ••• 1 know that architecture is life; or at least it is life itself taking form and therefore it is the
truest record of life as it was lived in the world yesterday, as it is lived today or ever will be lived.
So architecture I know to be a Great Spirit..." (Frank Lloyd Wright (1939) in Brooks Pfeiffer and
Nordland 1987: 7)
"Architecture is the will of the epoch translated into space" (Mies van der Rohe 1926)
Exercise
Architecture as a profession
reflected the spirit of the society that produced it (Conzen 1966). However,
this early work did not entail studies of architectural style per se, but were
explorations of style as a manifestation of the processes of creating form,
namely the interaction of the agents and the processes of change. Latterly,
research on architectural form has been linked to the types of agent responsible
for its creation (organizations and individuals), developing as a key strand of
research in British urban morphology from the 1980s onwards (Larkham 2006).
Using building records, studies of both commercial development (Whitehand
1992) and residential development (Whitehand and Carr 2001) have examined
the diffusion of stylistic innovations and have highlighted the geographical links
between agents, places and the nature of the physical changes planned and
implemented in cities (Larkham 2006).
In a key review of early geographical work on architecture, Jon Goss (1988)
noted that geography had generally failed to come to terms with the complexity
of architectural form and meaning. His paper called for the development of a new
architectural geography which explored four theoretical categories of buildings:
as cultural artefacts, as objects of value, as signs and as a spatial system. More
recent work on architecture within urban geography has sought to respond to
the challenges set out by Goss, particularly viewing the city as a ‘text’ which
is both written (inscribed with meaning by the various agents involved in the
urban development process) and read (understood by the users of the urban
environment).
In thinking about the city as written, urban geographers have examined
architecture and urban design as elements in the political economy of
urbanization, linked into the dynamics of urban change. This work builds on
the ideas from urban morphology of architectural style as a manifestation of the
processes of creating form, namely the interaction of the agents and processes
of change, linking this to political economy perspectives on the dynamics of
capitalism in creating and destroying urban environments (see chapter four).
Here architecture promotes the circulation of capital and helps stimulate
consumption and the extraction of surplus value by providing new products
and designs for different market segments, such as new office blocks, shopping
centres, or housing developments. It can also add an aura to developments
which serves to legitimize existing economic and social relations and suggest
stability and permanence (Pacione 2009; Knox and Pinch 2010). As noted
above, geographers such as Harvey (1989a) and Knox (1991) have highlighted
the relationship between the development of global advanced capitalism and the
emergence of new post-modern architectural forms. The property industry can
be seen to have adopted post-modern spectacular styles to promote product
differentiation in an increasingly competitive global market and to both create
and supply demand for an increasingly consumerist society. Similarly, the
192 • Issues
Architectural form and style are not simply the concretization of cultural
values and ideology, nor simply the reflection of material function and
social relations of production, nor equally matters of individual perception
and interpretation. Human life is multiple-sided and complex, and
the meaning of a building cannot simply be read without considering the
interaction of the subjects who are ultimately the sources of all its functions
and meanings.
(Goss 1988: 400)
In her 2001 paper, Loretta Lees uses the resemble the Colosseum in Rome. As a
example of the building of the new public symbol and civic landmark for Vancouver the
library in Vancouver, Canada to develop a public library sparked intensive discussion
critical geography of architecture. The paper and debate. Lees’ analysis of the public
is interesting as it charts her developing library initially explores the debates over the
approach to examining the library building symbolism of this new civic landmark within
from a ‘traditional’ political semiotic reading the multi-cultural city of Vancouver and the
of the building, seeking to understand its politics surrounding its architectural
symbolic meanings, to a more critical interpretation. Through examination of media
approach seeking to understand the building coverage and interviews with public officials,
through reflection on her active and she highlights the cultural political debates
embodied engagement with its spaces. around race and identity reflected in the
symbolism of the building. First, the
The library opened in 1995. It was designed
colosseum design was criticized by some as
by Moshe Safdie, an Israeli-born architect
racist and Eurocentric, ignoring the
educated in Canada and working in the US,
multicultural nature of the city, particularly
and its external appearance was seen to
the culture of recent Asian migrants and First
194 • Issues
continued
Nation Canadians. Second, some criticized discussion surrounding the selection of the
its placelessness and inauthenticity, seeing design represent a successful example of
the design as reflecting a globalized Sandercock’s idea of cosmopolis, where
postmodern corporate architectural style development is messy and design solutions
used for developments such as shopping are always contested and which offers a
malls and symbolizing a ‘Disneyfied’ positive way of engaging with difference in
American-style built environment. the urban realm. The public consultation
represents a medium through which the
These varying views of what the library
multiple meanings of the library were
symbolized highlight the problems in
enacted.
providing a definitive reading of the
building. In attempting to provide a The idea of meaning being enacted
‘thicker’ reading, Lees examined the leads onto Lees’ final exploration of the
writings of the architect for clues to what library’s meaning. She suggests that if
it might represent. However, Safdie’s meaning is enacted then it cannot be
idiosyncratic and contradictory views on finished and merely represented and that
architecture, the development of the the public consumption of architecture is
building and what it might represent, also important. The key question is then
served to further complicate Lees’ reading. not what the library means but also what
Her conclusion is that the design of the it does, focusing on the use of the library
colosseum is ambiguous and can be read and how meaning is embodied, performed
as multi-perspectival where users can locate and enacted. Reviewing field notes on the
their own places through the different use of the library by various users, she
memories and images the design throws argues that the meanings produced through
up for them. the consultation process are always in the
process of being enacted and subverted
In seeking to examine the concrete social
(such as by schoolchildren playing on the
process through which this multiple meaning
library escalators). Identity and its formation
develops, Lees draws on the work of
then become a central theme of a critical
Sandercock (1998) to think more fully about
geography of architecture that does not
the public consultation process and the
merely focus on form and producer but also
contested meanings within it. Reviewing her
considers the everyday users and
research notes, Lees suggests that the
consumption of architecture.
public architectural vote and the critical
Source: Lees (2001)
Knox and Pinch (2010: 134) suggest that the patriarchal qualities of the built
environment are one of the most important, if often overlooked, dimensions
of the socio-spatial dialectic. However, work by feminist theorists has been
important in examining the ways in which the built environment embodies
fundamental gender divisions and conflicts (see WGSG 1997). Here architects,
planners and designers play an influential role in transcribing gender roles and
Architecture • 195
relations into the physical fabric of the city. Researchers note that around the
world the urban environment is largely ‘man-made’ (WGSG 1997). The built
environment professions remain largely male, particularly at the most senior
levels, and consequently patriarchal values have become embodied in the
professional ideologies and praxis of built environment professions such as
architecture, planning and construction (see for example Greed 1994, 2000).
Authors such as Greed have argued that although more women are now
entering built environment professions, the underlying principles, codes and
conventions of these professions still embody traditional assumptions about the
socio-economic roles that women and men will undertake.
A clichéd theme in architectural theory has been identification of ‘masculine’
and ‘feminine’ elements in design, usually focusing on anatomical references
to tall towers (masculine power) and curving structures (feminine softness)
(Knox and Pinch 2010). However, these discussions have tended to trivialize
consideration of gender issues in architecture and essentialize masculine and
feminine characteristics in the consideration of building design. As some
feminist interpretations of architectural history have shown, it is the issues on
which architecture is silent that reveal more about the masculinist practices
of architecture rather than crude anatomical metaphors (Wilson 1991). For
example, in developing so-called radical new visions for buildings and urban
environments modern architects and urban designers have rarely had anything
to say about divisions between the sexes and gender divisions of labour in
particular, taking these for granted.
These assumptions about gender roles and relations are embodied in the design
of the urban environment at all scales, from that of the whole city down to that of
building interiors or pieces of public art. Mackenzie (1988) has argued that the
evolution of urban structure can be interpreted as a series of solutions to gender
conflicts bound up in the separation of home and work which was central to
nineteenth century industrialization. This resulted in the division of urban
structure into masculine centres of production and feminine suburbs of
reproduction. The ideas embodied in the design of suburbs solely as spaces of
social reproduction are reflected in building society adverts from the 1920s
and 1930s studied by Gold and Gold (1994). Here homes were depicted in green
settings, removed from spaces of production, with a woman and child often
welcoming the ‘man of the house’ home from work, invoking a traditional view
of gender roles (which some suggest continues in advertising associated with the
home today (WGSG 1997)). These taken-for-granted gender roles were also
reflected in the internal structure of suburban domestic buildings. This strong
gender coding of domestic architecture has been revealed in analyses of housing
designs from the nineteenth century onwards (see for example Roberts 1991).
Ideals of domesticity and nuclear family living are embodied in the floor layouts,
décor and design of single family dwellings centred on functional kitchens and a
196 • Issues
series of gendered domestic spaces (see figure 8.4). The significance of these
codings lies in the ways that they universalize and legitimize a particular form
of gender differentiation and domestic division of labour, presenting these
differences as natural rather than socially constructed and contested (Knox and
Pinch 2010).
Exercise
Undertake an audit of the design of your own also at the interior décor and the use of these
home environment. Think about the floor plan spaces – are there particular ‘masculine’ or
of this space – what rooms are provided, for ‘feminine’ spaces? Again, consider whether
what purposes and where are they positioned this reflects any assumptions about gender
within the house? Does this suggest any roles or whether they demonstrate different
particular assumptions about gender roles ways of living and a resistance to traditional
and the domestic division of labour? Look gender roles and relations.
If you have undertaken the exercise above, then your observations may
well demonstrate that traditional assumptions about domestic roles and the
gender division of labour are not universal or uncritically adopted but that
roles are multiple, fluid and contested. Again, researchers have highlighted the
problems encountered in the built environment by those whose needs appear
not to have been considered in the design of those spaces, which highlights
the gap between assumptions about roles and the actual activities that people
perform (see chapter ten). Feminist researchers have highlighted the problems
encountered by women with responsibilities for caring for children in
negotiating public city centre space where few facilities are provided for those
involved in childcare (those facilities either having limited provision or being
confined to suburban ‘reproductive’ environments) (Greed 2006). Similarly,
the isolation felt by women in suburban environments, distanced from access
to employment opportunities and public facilities, as a consequence of zoning,
has also been noted (WGSG 1997).
As well as identifying these problems, many feminist architects and designers
have also attempted to challenge conventional ways of designing built
environments, so questioning dominant ideas about masculinity and
femininity and ensuring that the particular needs of women and other
groups disadvantaged by design are catered for. Dolores Hayden (1981) has
highlighted nineteenth century housing designs which did not place the nuclear
family as central, offering alternative shared cooking and laundry spaces, so
liberating women with families from domestic tasks (although in most cases
this was liberation for middle-class women based on the communal domestic
work being undertaken by working-class women). In the contemporary
context, some architectural practices continue to produce designs which offer
alternative forms of domestic living or community spaces, often working
closely with their particular client groups in developing the design to meet
their needs (WGSG 1997). Women have also been active in remaking existing
environments, such as through involvement in safe city projects where women
come together to change the design of their neighbourhoods, addressing issues
such as poor street layout or poor lighting and signage (Wekerle and Whitzman
1995). Liz Bondi (1999) also highlights the role of women in the gentrification
of housing in inner Edinburgh, where refurbishment of these houses offered the
opportunity to create different domestic environments and an escape from
traditional suburban housing structures.
new radical imagery and tells society what to desire and how to desire it (Kaika
2010, see case study below).
If these new economic imaginaries are to be persuasive and resonate then
they must chime across different cultural practices. Jones (2009) uses
Bourdieu’s idea of the ‘field’ to highlight how architectural practice, as a
cultural field, recasts the economic imaginaries associated with global
capitalism within its architectural discourses. Of significance is the way in
which internationally renowned starchitects are able to cast themselves as
artists and distant from commercial practice through an emphasis on the
aesthetic and semiotic in architectural design discussions (such as through the
architectural press and awards). Starchitects, by virtue of the prestige and
mystique socially accorded to creativity, add value to iconic buildings through
their decisions about design, conferring prestige and a presumption of quality
even if this is not apparent to the observer. Thus, the iconic building becomes
seen as part of the long-standing canon of great architecture rather than merely
a commercial venture.
This links to Sklair’s (2005) observation that in acting as agents of global
capitalism, starchitects play a key role in mediating the demands of the
transnational capitalist class, the demands for local place identity and
the aesthetic rules of the architectural field in the design of iconic buildings.
In seeking to appeal to the internationally mobile capitalist class, these
iconic structures are designed to be visually consumed in a touristic way
which leads to an emphasis on the spectacular and out of the ordinary.
This encourages distinctive and memorable designs which are particularly
successful if they are media friendly and can be reduced to a logo image
(Sklair 2005). The skyline becomes something of an obsession and cities
become a ‘backdrop to a display of curious architectural objects’ (Kaika
2010: 471). Thus, for Sklair (2005) one of the defining features of an iconic
building is that it generates wide discussion and debate, with a key tension
being between the production of these spectacular and unusual transnational
architectural spaces, that seem to float free from the city itself and could be
almost anywhere, and desires for these structures to exhibit a certain place
rootedness and act as local markers. The connection between these iconic
structures and the cities in which they sit, and their use by urban populations,
are key issues highlighted both in Lees’ (2001) case study of the new public
library in Vancouver (see above) and Kaika’s (2010) examination of London’s
changing commercial skyline (see below).
Architecture • 201
In her 2010 paper, Maria Kaika examines the City’s global financial status as key
the development of recent iconic businesses lost global ranking or were taken
architecture in the City of London as a over, and also led to threats from Prime
response to a period of crisis and change in Minister Tony Blair’s Labour Government,
the institutional structures governing the keen to promote London as a global
City (this being the central historical and business hub, to abolish the Corporation.
financial core of London rather than the
In response to this challenge, the
wider metropolitan area). Here iconic
Corporation rebranded itself in the early
architecture produced under moments of
twenty-first century as an outward-looking
restructuring can be seen as an active part
institution, opening up to link with the
of the ‘radical imagery’ produced by elites
surrounding localities (through a range of
or institutions whose identity is in need of
charity initiatives) and to London’s new
reinvention. They act as ‘totems of the city
transnational business elites. This new
in the making’. Her analysis differs from
image was reflected in the new architectural
more standard analyses that see iconic language of the 2002 Development Plan for
buildings such as these as signifiers of the City which favoured tall buildings
economic success. over the conservation orientated ideas of
From 2000 onwards, the skyline of London earlier plans and which resonated with the
has been significantly altered by the pro-tall-building stance of the Mayor of
development of new, iconic, tall buildings, London. Whereas the City’s earlier iconic
of which the Swiss-Re Tower (or The Gherkin) buildings, such as the classical style Bank
was the first to be built and is the most of England building, identified with the City’s
traditional institutions, these new icons
widely recognized. Kaika argues that the
operate more as branding objects for
emergence of these iconic structures
transnational corporations or as speculative
is linked to the recent institutional
objects for real estate developers, reflecting
reconfiguration of the Corporation of
a new type of footloose architectural
London, the authority that runs the City and
patronage.
that has significant real estate holdings in
the City and planning powers. Prior to the Those transnational corporations and elites
1970s the Corporation, an ancient commissioning the buildings display little
institution with its origins in the twelfth place loyalty, with these buildings frequently
century, had a fairly traditional and insular sold on not long after they have been built
‘English’ character and outlook. This was (in the case of Swiss-Re) or in some cases
challenged from the 1970s onwards by the before they have been built (e.g. Bishopsgate
rapid liberalization and internationalization Tower). Similarly, urban life and the buildings
of London’s economy, particularly its erected are viewed as relatively transient,
financial markets. Resistance by the with the role of urban governors to facilitate
Corporation to this ‘foreign’ invasion of the development of ‘acupuncture points’
companies, people, architectural styles and in the city – an urbanism of negotiation with
new technologies and practices weakened transnational business elites. Like the
202 • Issues
continued
organizations and people commissioning used and serve to further remove the City
them, these iconic buildings display little of London from the cognitive maps of urban
attachment to the city that surrounds them. dwellers, who while recognizing these
Based on interviews with city workers, Kaika buildings as London icons find it hard to
argues that these buildings create little locate them on a map of the city!
unsurveilled public space that is actually Source: Kaika (2010)
Architecture of fear
The paper provides a rare empirical similarly high risk, the three cities and the
examination of the much-discussed loss of districts studied in each differ in size,
publicness in cities due to the increased population and urban density, and exhibit
presence of anti-terror security zones and very different configurations of public space.
related behavioural and access controls.
In each neighbourhood Németh evaluated
The paper highlights how security
security landscapes using a simple set of
landscapes have shifted from the hard,
criteria to assess the intensity,
intense, militarized architecture of the late
permanence, and location of individual
1990s and early 2000s, explored in much
security measures. Areas were scored on
of the writing on Los Angeles as a post-
their access restrictions, including bollards,
modern city, to a more camouflaged, less
planters, gates, or fences located at entry
obtrusive, approach in recent years.
points to a space or building, behavioural
Additionally, Németh points out that security
controls, including posted signs prohibiting
policy and planning have become more activities or design features to discourage
decentralized, currently undertaken less by actions like sitting or gathering, and
singular, public entities and increasingly by surveillance measures, including security
networks of public and private actors. The guards and other human surveillance, but
paper moves beyond consideration of not CCTV cameras given their ubiquitous
security measures for individual buildings nature in cities. Geo-tagged photographs
and structures to consider the district-wide were taken of the security measures and
security apparatus in the civic centres uploaded into a GIS system which was then
(largely public buildings) and financial able to calculate the extent and intensity of
districts (largely private buildings) of the the security zones in the study areas.
selected ‘high risk’ cities of New York City, Variables relating to the security policy
Los Angeles, and San Francisco. While of landscape in each district were also added
204 • Issues
continued
into the assessment. Statistical analysis following recent terrorist attacks. The
reveals that the security landscape across research also reveals that security zones
all six districts covers a significant 20.4 per governed by multi-stakeholder networks are
cent of the total public space footprint. more intense and militarized than zones
This varies between cities, with the managed by a single entity, and that these
security landscape only covering 3.4 per networks of actors are playing an
cent of San Francisco’s Civic Centre, but increasingly significant role in mediating
35.7 per cent of New York’s Civic Centre. and regulating the governance of urban
Additionally, the security landscape is most space and creating new geographies, or
prevalent and intense in New York City, landscapes, of security in cities.
linked principally to policy responses Source: Németh (2010)
Summary
Follow-up activities
Essay title: ‘Critically consider the ways in which power and cultural
dominance can be seen to be symbolized in the urban landscape.’
Architecture • 205
An effective answer would begin by exploring the idea of buildings and the
urban landscape as ‘produced’ in that they can be seen to embody wider
socio-cultural values and the values of those creating landscapes. Here the
landscape can be seen as a text. It would also look to examine the issue of
power and the idea that particular dominant cultural ideas and groups are
more able than others to express their values in the urban landscape. Here
case study examples could be drawn upon to illustrate the ways in which
power, such as that exercised by the state, religious groups or large
corporations, is expressed in specific urban forms and in the design and
layout of urban landscapes. An excellent answer would then develop these
themes and consider the arguments of Goss and Lees which highlight the
problems of trying to uncover the meanings embodied in urban landscapes.
It would consider the idea that the meanings of buildings are always multiple
and contested and that meaning is not inherent but changes according to the
social interaction of city dwellers with the urban environment.
Project idea
Undertake a ‘reading’ of an important public the ideas of Goss (1993) and Lees (2001).
or commercial building in your city or a city One avenue for further work would be to
that is familiar to you. Begin by developing a undertake the first part of this project idea
‘thick description’ of the building, using the as a group, with each person producing
framework outlined by Domosh (1989) in his or her own ‘thick description’ and
her work on skyscrapers in New York. Here then comparing these to see the extent
you will need to look for archive sources to which multiple interpretations of the
that give you information about when the building can exist and why this might be.
building was developed, by whom and for Another avenue would be an examination of
what purpose. Good sources of information the users of the building and their reactions
could be planning department records, local to it. This might either involve ethnographic
history sources and newspaper articles. research, as Lees undertook in the
When you have developed your ‘thick Vancouver library, or interviews with users,
description’, develop this into a broader as in the case of Kaika’s exploration of
critical geography of architecture, drawing on spectacular architecture in London.
206 • Issues
Further reading
Books
● Coaffee, J. (2016) Terrorism, Risk and the Global City: Towards Urban
Resilience, Abingdon: Routledge
Focusing on London, the book extends the discussion of fortress landscapes to
consider how terrorism is reshaping the contemporary city and the challenge of
developing city-wide managerial measures and strategies.
● Ching, F.D.K., Jarzombek, M.M. and Prakash, V. (2006) Global History of
Architecture, Chichester: John Wiley & Sons
This book offers a comprehensive discussion of global architectural history,
refreshingly not just from a western perspective.
● Fainstein, S.S. and Servon, L.J. (eds) (2005) Gender and Planning: A Reader,
New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press
An edited collection of key writings about gender and the design and planning
of the city.
● Ingersoll, R. and Kostof, S. (2013) World Architecture: A Cross-Cultural
History, Oxford: Oxford University Press
This comprehensive student-friendly text extends discussion of architecture
beyond the sole consideration of great monuments to find connections with
ordinary dwellings, urbanism, and different cultures from around the world.
● King, A. (2004) Spaces of Global Cultures: Architecture, Urbanism, Identity,
London: Routledge
King’s book examines how architectural and building cultures are affected by
transnational processes and looks at the impacts of translating building types
from one culture to another.
● Till, J. (2009) Architecture Depends, Cambridge, MA: MIT Press
Written by an architect, this book is one of a number of recent texts offering a
critical look at current architectural practice as out of touch with the ‘ordinary’
world and the users of buildings.
Journal articles
Useful paper that explores the methodology for studying at the interface of
geography and architecture and considering buildings as ‘events’, charting the
diverse afterlives of two modernist housing schemes in Glasgow and Singapore.
● Jones, P. (2009) ‘Putting architecture in its social place: a cultural political
economy of architecture’, Urban Studies, 46(12): 2519–2536
Part of a special edition of the journal covering architecture, the paper explores
the role of and practice of architecture as a profession.
● Lees, L. (2001) ‘Towards a critical geography of architecture: the case of an
ersatz colosseum’, Ecumene, 8(1): 51–86
Key paper underpinning the development of recent critical geographies of
architecture.
● Moran, D., Turner, J. and Jewkes, Y. (2016) ‘Becoming big things: building
events and the architectural geographies of incarceration in England and Wales’,
Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers, 41(4): 416–428
This extends geographies of architecture beyond ‘signature’ buildings to consider
the production of the banal, carceral architecture of new prisons.
● Smigiel, C. (2013) ‘The production of segregated urban landscapes: a critical
analysis of gated communities in Sofia’, Cities, 35: 125–135
The article provides a case study of the emergence of gated residential suburbs in
Central and Eastern European cities, and examines both their specific form and
the political-economic processes underpinning their development.
Websites
Introduction
All cities have images. These are simplified, generalized, often stereotypical,
sometimes contrasting impressions that people hold about cities. It is impossible
to know our environment in its entirety so our impressions of the world are
inevitably partial and incomplete. Our knowledge of the world is heavily
influenced by representations of places in such things as the news media,
television, films, art, novels and poems or in conversations with friends and
acquaintances.
Exercise
Our everyday lives are saturated with encounter them, the nature of these
images and representations of a variety representations and the ways in which they
of places. Try to keep a diary of the ones are partial and selective images of these
you encounter for one day (think also places. In what ways do you think these
about places that you don’t encounter representations shape your impressions
representations of and why this might be). of the world? How important are
Note the places whose representations representations of cities, compared to
you encounter, the media in which you those of other environments?
Exercise
Think of a town or city that you know well, share the same impressions as visitors?
your home town or the place that you are Who do you think shapes or determines this
studying in, for example. Does it have a image? Have there been any recent
clear, distinctive, dominant image? If so, attempts to change or update the image of
how would you describe this? How has the urban area you are studying? Reflect on
this image been formed? Has it changed your answers to these questions as you
over time do you know? Are there any read the remainder of the chapter.
alternatives to this image? Do residents
Representations of the city have a very long history. We can trace positive and
negative images of cities (often referred to as pro- and anti-urban myths) back
to ancient Greek and Roman civilizations, find them in texts like the Bible and
can see them as recurrent through every subsequent historical period (see Gold
and Revill 2004; Short 2005; Hubbard 2006). It has been, and remains, common
for images of the city to be constituted in opposition to those of the countryside
and for these two environments to be seen to stand for very different sets of
values. This is despite many arguing that this categorical distinction between
city and country is difficult to sustain in actuality.
From this we can see that images of the city (and the countryside) are typically
implicated in a series of wider moral debates. The cultural historian Raymond
Williams has written extensively about the histories and wider cultural and
moral significance of these images in his influential book The City and the
Country (1973).
Typically, urban images are examined through the pro- and anti-urban
framework adopted in table 9.1. While undoubtedly a very useful device for
categorizing the variety of images from the plethora of representations of
the city that have emerged through time, it does carry with it the danger of
underplaying the complexity and ambiguity of many of these images. Not all
urban images are categorically pro- or anti-urban. While most commentators
are quick to recognize this, the deployment of the pro- and anti-urban lens
through which to examine representations of the city has tended to underplay
this ambiguity. Also, in focusing on this, accounts have tended to underplay
other important dimensions of urban representations, such as the relationships
between the formal qualities of representations and the experiences or qualities
of the city they seek to depict. While not trying to demolish the pro- and
anti-urban framework we want to use this section to draw attention to some
210 • Issues
Civilized Dangerous
Exciting Ugly
Liberating Corrupting
Romantic Alienating
Modern Polluted
Cultural Commercial
Diverse Fragmented
Planned Sprawling
Managed Chaotic
other dimensions of urban imagery. We will now consider this with reference to
one example.
The city is a common theme explored in all sorts of popular music. There are
many examples where songs have expressed seemingly unequivocally positive
or negative views of cities. We can think, for example, of the edgy paranoia of a
violent and bankrupt New York in Grandmaster Flash and the Furious Five’s
‘The Message’ (1982) with its recurrent refrains of ‘Don’t push me ’cos I’m
close to the edge’ and ‘it’s like a jungle sometimes, it makes me wonder how
I keep from going under’. An equivalent from the UK would be The Specials’
1981 hit ‘Ghost Town’ which paints a bleak picture of British cities at the time
as fractured, violent, run-down places haunted by the ghosts of what they were.
However, these are in sharp contrast to celebrations of the city in songs such
as ‘Paris’ (2008) by Friendly Fires which sees the city as a place of romance,
escape, hedonism, freedom and aspiration. In standing for these qualities,
however, the city of Paris is seen as all that the British suburbs, from where it
was written, are not (see chapter three; Silverstone 1997; Gold and Revill 2004;
Short 2005). We should think, therefore, not only of the images of cities but
also of which parts of the city these images refer to.
Country music, as the name would suggest, is a form of popular music that has
been firmly associated with strong anti-urban sentiments. Cities in this genre are
typically portrayed as lonely, alienating, corrupting places of loss and failure.
Kris Kristofferson’s (1969) song ‘Sunday Morning Comin’ Down’ reflects this
widely held view of the city:
On the Sunday morning sidewalk,
Wishing, Lord that I was stoned.
‘Cos there’s something in a Sunday,
Makes a body feel alone.
Images of the city • 211
Ooh Las Vegas, ain’t no place for a poor boy like me.
Every time I hit your crystal city
I know you’re going to make a wreck out of me.
This example highlights the ways in which the meanings of urban imagery can
shift with the contexts within which representations are examined. Traditionally
though, analysis of urban imagery has tended to focus on the representations
themselves at the neglect of other potential ‘sites of meaning’ (Rose 2006),
such as their production or their consumption by audiences. Opening up
representations to this wider analysis potentially results in both more nuanced
and more complex interpretations.
Country music is not the only medium that demonstrates such ambiguity
in its urban imagery. It can be seen across all media which take the city as
their subject. For example, a number of researchers have noted ‘polysemy’,
the tendency for a number of different meanings to co-exist within a single text,
as characteristic of media coverage of the city. Jacqueline Burgess’s (1985)
analysis of the national press coverage of a number of street disturbances in
British cities during the 1980s discerned notes of sympathy for inner-city
populations, even in articles that elsewhere labelled these spaces through
evocations of pathology and war.
It is important, therefore, when considering representations of all kinds not to
uncritically accept overly one-dimensional interpretations. The case study that
follows highlights ways in which the production process behind news texts
contributes to the complexity of their meanings.
continued
‘breathtaking civic renaissance’ passed through many hands and which
– complete with a new convention are composed of many elements. While
centre, sports arena, tourism reporters might produce copy that adheres
office, orchestra hall, ballet closely to notions of journalistic balance,
company and opera company albeit undercut sometimes by the placement
– the fact that thousands of of key sources at the start and ends of
citizens were facing eviction articles, the headlines and visual elements
because of industrial action in a of articles typically project less balanced
council benefits office was, to meanings. This was certainly the case
say the least, an image problem. in many of the articles that critically
(Cohen 1993: 11) commented on urban regeneration in
Britain in the 1990s. Examining news texts
It is rare to see such open criticism of urban
as a whole highlighted that their different
regeneration in the British national media. It
elements projected subtly, and sometimes
contrasts sharply with earlier press coverage
not so subtly, different meanings. For
of the process which was largely positive
example, in John Arlidge’s (1994) article on
and highlighted the probable benefits to
criticisms of the legacy of Glasgow’s year
cities. There are a number of reasons for
as European Capital of Culture in 1990,
the emergence of this critique. Journalism is
while the article’s main text largely balances
not a closed discourse, rather it is one that
opposing sources the other components
overlaps with a number of other discourses,
of the article – the headline, headline
in this case including academic analysis and
paragraph, the picture and picture caption,
debate about urban change. Academics,
which together make up the majority of the
who were growing increasingly critical of
news text in terms of space and immediate
the regeneration of many cities at the time,
visual impact – all emphasize the failure
were often quoted in articles and cited as
of the event to address deep-seated
sources of expert opinion. Typically, they
problems of poverty in the city. The picture
would introduce a very critical take on
shows a smiling Mr Happy figure (an icon
the process of regeneration. Second, a
from Glasgow’s promotional campaign at the
production process, often not acknowledged
time) contrasted with a homeless man on
in analysis of their meanings, lies behind
waste ground under a crumbling Mr Happy
news texts. This process involves the
mural. This message is reinforced by the
production of copy by reporters, its editing
main picture caption: ‘No mean city? Since
by editors, the production of photographs by
the original campaign poverty in Glasgow
photographers and picture editors and the
has worsened’ and the headline ‘Blob on the
creation of headlines, captions and the
landscape’.
design of layout by sub-editors. What
Source: Hall (2008)
emerges are complex texts that have
of production that lie behind them and the contexts within which they are
presented. This is to say nothing of the interpretations of these texts by
audiences which might produce a very different set of readings altogether.
Recognizing these multiple sites of meaning will produce more rounded
interpretations of these representations and their associated imagery.
Another dimension that it is important to acknowledge when analysing urban
representations is the formal qualities of texts. We can see the significance of
this if we consider the ways that some, particularly avant-garde, writers and
artists have explored the relationships between the formal qualities of media
and the nature of the urban experience. The late nineteenth and early
twentieth centuries were times of huge change in the cities of Europe and
North America. These changes included the restructuring of capitalism as it
became increasingly industrial; the associated rise of the factory system and
the consequent rapid growth of urban areas; the emergence of new building
and architectural forms such as the first skyscrapers; technological changes
in transport, telecommunications and media including the emergence of
photography, film and advertising; and a greater heterogeneity to social forms
such as the crowd and to urban social life more generally (Berman 1988).
Modes of artistic representation that developed at this time sought to give
expression to these experiences of capitalist modernity as it unfolded primarily
through large cities. Modernist painters, photographers, film makers and writers
shattered the formal limitations of the prevailing artistic mode of expression,
realism, and introduced a series of bold, radical innovations intended to capture
the exhilarating yet chaotic modern urban experience.
The imprint of capitalist modernity was felt most heavily in the great cities of
Europe and North America such as London, Paris, Berlin, St Petersburg and
New York. Much modernist art, literature and film was explicitly concerned
with exploring and finding new ways of representing the development of an
apparently distinctly modern urban consciousness in these cities. They were cities
in which few of the settled certainties of the pre-modern world remained. The
everyday experiences of these cities were at the same time exhilarating yet
frightening, dynamic yet precarious, liberating yet disturbing (Berman 1988).
This engendered a crisis of representation among writers and artists as the formal
conventions of realism precluded its ability to give artistic expression to these
experiences. Subsequently, a number of avant-garde artistic movements emerged
that engaged directly with, and frequently took as their subject, the profound
physical and social transformations of urban space. These included techniques
such as Cubism, Futurism, Fauvism and Montage, which together radically
altered the conventions and boundaries across a range of artistic media. Cubism’s
formal innovations included juxtaposition, whereby temporal and spatial order was
disrupted and replaced by montages of temporal fragments and multiple
perspectives within the same frame.
Images of the city • 215
John Dos Passos’ (1925) novel Manhattan Spring rich in glutten … Chockfull
Transfer illustrates well the formal of golden richness, delight in
deconstruction that lay behind many every bite, THE DADDY OF
modernist modes of representation. THEM ALL, spring rich in glutten.
The novel is written using a montage Nobody can buy better bread
technique and details the lives of a vast range than PRINCE ALBERT. Wrought
of characters from a wide social spectrum in steel, monel, copper, nickel,
New York between 1892 and 1920. Short wrought iron. All the world loves
episodic scenes rapidly follow one another natural beauty. LOVE’S BARGAIN
with little to indicate any transition. The novel that suit in Gumpel’s best value
covers three distinct time periods but is not in town. Keep that schoolgirl
presented in chronological order. Finally, the complexion … JOE KISS,
pace of the narration varies wildly from scene starting, lighting, ignition and
to scene. The following passage describes generators.
the experience of travelling through streets (Dos Passos 1925: 351)
that are reminiscent of cubist paintings in
Formally Manhattan Transfer is more closely
that they are saturated with montages of
related to cinema than traditional forms
wildly contrasting advertising imagery and
of the novel. Using these techniques it
their slogans:
conveys the intensity and diversity of city life
He walked north through the city in ways difficult to envisage within a more
of shiny windows, through the realistic narrative.
city of scrambled alphabets, Source: Brosseau (1995)
through the city of gilt letter signs.
216 • Issues
The case study above highlights again the ambiguities inherent in much urban
imagery. Indeed, it was the intention of a number of modernist artists to capture
the contrasting nature of the urban experience in their work. Certainly it would
be difficult to reduce many of these representations to simple pro- or anti-urban
positions.
As we noted in chapter four, as many cities around the world began to suffer
the ill-effects of deindustrialization they began to turn their attention to the
potential of sectors such as the service industry, sport, leisure, culture and
tourism to generate new jobs and investment. This necessitated a much greater
emphasis on the enhancement and promotion of positive urban images. It is
clear that both the number of cities involved in this marketing, promotion or
branding and the range of methods and media employed to this end have
increased since the 1970s (Barke and Harrop 1994: 97). However, despite this,
for many years cities remained ‘undersold’ (Holcomb 1994). Bailey (1989: 4),
for example, cites the case of economic development advertising in the US
Images of the city • 219
media which totalled $46 million annually in the late 1980s, while at the same
time around $100 million was being spent each year on the promotion of
‘Miller Lite’ beer. Similarly place promotion was, for many years at least,
undertaken largely by members of local authorities with little specialist training.
Consequently, Briavel Holcomb was able to argue in 1994 that ‘the marketing
of cities tends to be generic and repetitive’ (p. 121). The increased importance of
place promotion since then has seen both increasing funding and the greater
professionalization of the process. Sophisticated city websites demonstrate
that the Internet has emerged as a key platform upon which cities are now
sold (Urban 2002), while city marketing has emerged as a recognized career
trajectory among marketing professionals. Despite these developments,
however, city marketing has not entirely escaped the criticisms of its earlier
days. Commentators have noted that still cities tend to draw on a very narrow
repertoire of images when promoting themselves. Chris Murray (2001: 6), for
example, has argued that:
the content of place marketing messages in promotional literature … reveals
disturbing trends. Instead of a dynamic and challenging approach to local
character, we are confronted with unrepresentative stereotypes and parodies
of the past. Rather than an inclusive methodology that addresses local
audiences, it is exclusively outward-looking, thereby ignoring whole sections
of the population. Authenticity and reality are substituted for a burlesque
caricature of place. The messages follow an insipid formula, which makes it
difficult to distinguish one place from another.
Hudson et al. recognized many of the critical points above in their discussion
of an alternative model of place branding which involved extensive community
involvement in the development of place brands. They argue (2016: 1) that:
Many places promote spectacular scenery, good quality of life, friendly
people, and a sound business infrastructure. However, these factors are no
longer differentiators, so places need a strong brand identity to stand out
in order to attract people to live, work and play. But brand development is
often driven by short-term, top-down approaches with limited community
participation.
representative of the town’s 13,600 (2013) residents. Their discussion does not
critically reflect on the potential absences of hard‑to‑reach groups within this
process. Further, while this method of engaging the community in brand
development might seem feasible and appropriate within a small‑town setting
with, perhaps, a relatively homogeneous community, it is less easy to imagine
how it might be deployed in a much larger urban area with a range of more
diverse neighbourhoods. Finally, the place attributes that emerged out of this
process and which informed the development of Bluffton’s new brand were not
radically different to those that tend to inform more top‑down place branding
exercises.
Exercise
John Rennie Short (1996) has recognized at the promotional websites of two different
four key sets of urban imagery that cities. Can you classify the images they
underpin a large proportion of city contain using the four categories outlined
marketing campaigns. These are associated by Short? Can you find any images that
with the city as: multicultural, do not fit these categories or could you
environmentally friendly, possessing a devise an alternative set of your own
wealth of cultural attractions and an ideal categories? On the evidence of what you
location for new investment. The plethora of have observed on these two websites do
urban images that we encounter through you agree with Briavel Holcomb (1994: 121)
marketing campaigns can be interpreted that ‘the marketing of cities tends to be
largely as versions and combinations of generic and repetitive’ and with the views of
these basic sets of imagery. Look in detail Chris Murray above?
Much criticism of city marketing by academics has sought to locate it within the
cultural politics of the city. Many have commented on the apparent differences
between the vibrant imagery of promotional campaigns and the persistence or
worsening of social and economic conditions for large proportions of the
populations of these cities (see Hambleton 1991; Watson 1991; Jones and
Evans 2008). The enhancement of urban image, and the associated physical
transformation of many city centre landscapes through projects of urban
regeneration and development, have been labelled the ‘carnival mask’ of late
capitalist urbanization (Harvey 1988: 35), the criticism being that while such
city images create the impression of regeneration, change and vibrancy, they
do little, if anything, to address the underlying social and economic problems
that necessitated regeneration in the first place. Further, the images of cities
generated through marketing campaigns may clash with those held by residents
of cities, or at least some sections of them. Like all representations, marketing
campaigns generate partial and selective impressions of cities. In being aimed at
external audiences of potential investors, residents, tourists and companies
Images of the city • 221
Exercise
Consider the following statement in the light wealth or jobs or a glossier image’ (Barnett
of the promotional strategies for an urban 1991: 168). Do you agree with the
area that you know well. ‘The danger is sentiment that city marketing is complicit in
clear: that city marketing strategies will deny a process of exclusion? Do you feel that
any voice for, or celebration of, those aspects of the city are excluded from the
elements of their indigenous culture that dominant images of this area? If so, what
might impede the competitive search for do you think are the implications of this?
City marketing has also been criticized for its apparent appropriation and
sanitization of often complex and contested place and social histories and
identities and their reconstruction within officially produced urban images.
Where city marketing narratives do pay attention to ‘alternative’ or otherwise
marginalized histories and identities it tends to do so by reducing them to a
few stereotypical slogans or appealing images. The experiences of minority
communities for example, tend to be reduced to that of a ‘lively street life’
or sanitized references to cosmopolitanism or diversity (see Dwyer 2005).
Complex, contested identities, drawing on aspects of cities such as industry and
work, memory, community and resistance tend to be stripped of any radical or
confrontational associations and are represented through narratives such as
skill, craft and tradition (Hall 1997). This is not to advocate an idealization of
these alternative histories and identities, many of which, for example, may have
been heavily gendered or exclusionary themselves, but rather to highlight their
unproblematic (re)presentation through city marketing campaigns.
Finally, it is apparent that the reimaging of cities through marketing campaigns
is increasingly driving the physical reshaping of cities through processes of
regeneration and development. As image assumes ever greater importance in
the post-industrial economy it is becoming clearer that the actual production
of urban landscapes reflects the necessity for cities to present positive images of
222 • Issues
City marketing initiatives have changed from the art gallery or museum to include
somewhat in recent years from those the commercial spaces of business.
associated with major flagship projects
The competition has undoubtedly
of development to more diffuse initiatives
benefited the winning businesses. Many
involving a variety of actors. However,
have reported increased business and
increasingly, these initiatives are tied to
exposure as a result and designers within
material changes in the urban landscape,
the city have reported similar upturns in
leading to the creation of distinctive urban
business associated with the competition.
‘brands’ that encompass both the images
Likewise, interest in design among the
of cities and their urban spaces. One
Montréal public has also grown as the
example is the annual competition for
numbers getting involved in public votes in
architecture and interior design launched
the competition has increased greatly.
in Montréal in Canada in 1995 (Commerce
Many winning businesses have been
Design Montréal). This represents a new
concentrated in particular neighbourhoods
phase in the branding of cities in that the
and the competition has helped in the
responsibility, and the associated costs and
creation of distinctive identities for these
risks, are ‘downloaded’ to businesses
areas. Competition awards have not been a
and citizens. This approach also represents
guarantee of commercial success, however,
something of a shift in the nature of urban
as a number of winners have subsequently
governance. While requiring relatively
closed. This has raised concerns that the
little public funding, the competition has
competition places too much emphasis on
generated a great deal of international
the aesthetics of design rather than its
media coverage and has been adopted
functional and commercial aspects.
by a number of other cities internationally.
The aim of creative or design orientated There is the potential though that initiatives
approaches such as this is the such as this might generate negative
differentiation of cities and the generation external impacts. There is a danger that
of economic, social and cultural value for homogenization of design will result as a
cities or neighbourhoods. These initiatives relatively small number of ‘star’ designers are
extend the idea of the cultural destination employed by businesses who subscribe to
224 • Issues
continued
international notions of ‘coolness’ rather than criticized for focusing on design as artefact
more diverse ideas of design. This can occur and failing to incubate more substantial
between cities as this model of city branding design linkages and cultures across the city.
becomes exported internationally. Also, While the nature of city marketing has evolved
initiatives such as this can become implicated and diffused across a broader range of actors
in processes of gentrification and the creation within cities, it would seem that some of the
of socially exclusive urban spaces, indeed earlier concerns expressed about its impacts
there is evidence of this in Montréal. and effectiveness remain.
Initiatives such as this have also been Source: Rantisi and Leslie (2006)
Summary
Representations are a vital way in which we come to know cities. They are
also, perhaps increasingly, bound up in the ways that cities change and develop
in material ways. While history has been saturated with much unequivocally
pro- or anti-urban imagery this is not to deny the significance of much
ambiguous urban imagery and the values that have been associated with it.
Almost inevitably representations of the city are implicated in processes of
cultural politics. For this reason analysis of city images should go beyond
merely noting bias, omissions and exaggerations. It should seek to uncover the
ways in which representations are produced, the uses to which they are put
and the ways in which they are interpreted by their audiences. Representations,
then, are important. As Mike Crang (1999: 60) argues:
We have to face the possibility that we may only be able to understand reality
through words and images … In this way we need to see images as actively
creating the world rather than simply transmitting a prior reality.
Follow-up activities
Essay title: ‘Cities are more concerned with enhancing their externally
perceived image than they are with addressing basic issues of social and
economic welfare.’ Discuss.
The question touches on the supposed current obsession among city governments
with place promotion. An effective answer would note this but would suggest
that the issue is not reducible to such a simple, bold statement that suggests an
either/or situation. It might suggest, for example, that the relative emphasis varies
between cities. The national government policy context might be important here
Images of the city • 225
or the nature and size of different cities. The emphasis in the answer would rest
on the case studies chosen. A good answer might question the assumption that
an emphasis in a city on image promotion necessarily means that basic social
and economic welfare questions are less important. This might be the case but
merely stating it would get little credit. More important would be the ability to
convincingly demonstrate this link, drawing on evidence from case studies.
Some of these issues are explored in the further reading outlined below.
Project idea
Select a town or city to study. Put together a Look at the nature and range of these
portfolio of as many images of that place as images, noting similarities and differences
you can find. These might come from the between them. How does considering who
media, films, television, novels or poems, produced these images, the purpose for
songs, advertising, place promotion which they were produced and for what
campaigns or community or arts groups. audiences, help us understand the diversity
Collect historical as well as contemporary in the nature of the images that you have
images. Think of novel ways to present this collected?
portfolio.
Further reading
Books
● Ward, S.V. (1998) Selling Places: The Marketing and Promotion of Towns and
Cities 1850–2000, London: E. & F.N. Spon
The most comprehensive guide to place promotion /city marketing available.
Lots of fascinating images of early place promotion materials. Great to see how
the process has evolved over time.
● WiIliams, R. (1973) The City and the Country, London: Chatto & Windus
A classic study, still very relevant today. Many subsequent editions available.
Journal articles
Websites
Introduction
Everyday life, for the vast majority of people at least, is anchored around
places that provide senses of safety, security, identity and belonging. The most
obvious of these places are the home and the neighbourhood. Edward Relph
(1976: 1), whose work we discuss below, has argued that ‘to be human is to
live in a world filled with significant places: to be human is to have and to
know your place’. The emotional relationship between people and place,
then, is an important aspect of everyday life but one to which human, and
particularly urban, geographers have, at times, paid scant attention. The
Experiencing the city • 229
The book goes on to chart what the landscape can say about the people who
create and use it and how this meaning can be interpreted.
Exercise
Think about your own relationship to Do you feel that the planning, management
ordinary, mundane, everyday places. Can and conservation of urban areas pays
you think of examples of such places that sufficient attention to the significance
are important to you? What is the nature of of these kinds of place? In what ways could
these places? In what ways are they these discourses be refigured to take
important to you? In what ways, and to what account of the significance of these more
extent, do you feel they are part of your own ordinary places?
personal geographies?
Some recent work has tried to highlight regeneration, where the pace of urban
the phantasmagoric or ghostly qualities change is slower and its completeness
of mundane, everyday spaces and less certain. Tim Edensor has used his
landscapes. Drawing on the work of daily commute to work in Manchester in
theorists of the everyday such as Michel the north of England as a vehicle to explore
de Certeau, this work has explored the these qualities of the city. He considers the
ways in which everyday urban landscapes ghosts of the working-class, which these
are replete with traces of the past and landscapes evoke, through the traces of
uses now gone, but which recent phases this past that remain embedded in them
of development have only partially removed. and through the absences and gaps in the
Thus, the city can be thought of as a present-day landscape of the city where
temporal collage in which traces of the once vibrant activities took place. Edensor’s
past, and its obvious absences, ‘haunt’ work emphasizes the importance of the
the present-day city. These phantasmagoric mundane spaces of the city and highlights
landscapes are typically found away from an aspect of these spaces too frequently
the centres of cities and the sites of urban overlooked.
Figure 10.1 Traces of the past: a former factory building, now a fashion and design
school, East London
Source: Author’s photograph
Experiencing the city • 233
continued
Edensor discusses a number of ‘roadside significance. Traces of the past might look
hauntings’ that he encounters on his incongruous when set against more recent
commute. These include an old abandoned developments offering clues to the
cinema, a railway line converted into a buildings, and communities and lifestyles
cycle path, an ex-council estate and the associated with them, which lie under the
site of Manchester City Football Club’s foundations of the present cityscape.
former ground Maine Road. The ghostly Alternatively, their current silence, in the
qualities of these spaces are many. Through case of the former railway line and the
traces of the past still visible, they evoke quiet streets around Maine Road, poignantly
previous eras, communities and social, recall their contrasting noisier, more vibrant
economic or political moments and pasts. Edensor’s work reiterates the
activities now long gone; their shabbiness significance of the most mundane of
offers a counterpoint to both the gleaming urban landscapes, but does so through a
modern city being reconstructed through subjective, imaginative reading of urban
regeneration and to their own former glory. space and one open to the uncertainties
These landscapes are often difficult to and poignancies that are written into its
decipher, provoking uncertainties and fabric.
questions about their former uses and Source: Edensor (2008)
In a way, Nick Gallent, and others who have worked with him, are raising similar
questions about this most ordinary of landscapes to those raised by J.B. Jackson
and Peirce Lewis above and are demonstrating that these often overlooked
landscapes remain the subject of serious academic enquiry.
Exercise
One of the most mundane and undervalued between country and city? Does it challenge
landscapes in urban areas is the rural-urban this division?
fringe. It is a zone that encircles all urban
2 What is your reaction to the aesthetics of
areas and contains a number of distinctive
the rural-urban fringe?
land uses and functions. It is also the site
of a number of particular issues that reflect ●● What aspects of this zone do you
the variety of competing land uses that appreciate/value?
come together here. The rural-urban fringe is ●● What aspects of this zone do you
generally seen as a problem in planning and dislike?
management terms. To a large extent this ●● Why do you think you hold these views
stems from reactions to the aesthetics of about this zone?
the fringe which are overwhelmingly ●● In what ways do non-visual senses
negative. A good guide to this zone is the play a part in your experience of the
work of Nick Gallent mentioned above. urban fringe?
Spend some time walking through the What do you think your reactions tell us
rural-urban fringe of an area that you about the attitudes that exist in society
know well. Try to take in as many of its towards ordinary landscapes? How does the
different characteristics as possible. rural-urban fringe fit into our views of valued
As you go around think about the questions landscapes?
below and collect evidence (perhaps in 3 What is to be done about the ‘aesthetic
the form of photographs) to attempt to problem’ of the rural-urban fringe?
address them.
Should it:
1 What is the nature of the rural-urban
fringe? Is this zone: ●● Be ‘beautified’ through physical change
and planning (i.e. community forests,
●● Rural? green infrastructure planning)?
●● Urban? ●● Be re-evaluated or reimagined,
● A transition zone moving from through education that challenges our
predominantly urban to predominantly prevailing views of aesthetics and
rural functions? valued landscapes and encourages us
●● Something different, a zone that to appreciate the functional elements
cannot be classified into the of the landscape found in the
categories rural/urban? rural-urban fringe?
What does the rural-urban fringe suggest Compare your thoughts on these issues to
about our understanding of the division those discussed in Gallent’s work.
236 • Issues
It is a fact, all too easily overlooked, that the senses play a vital part in our
experience and understanding of the environment. Urban geography though has
rarely paid sufficient attention to the significance of the senses to our experience
of the city. Work on the senses has tended to be ‘ghettoized’ somewhat within
the sub-discipline of behavioural geography (Walmsley and Lewis 1993), an
offshoot of positivist spatial science that has crept little onto the agendas of the
other sub-disciplines of human geography. However, recent work from within
cultural geography has refocused attention on the embodied nature of the urban
experience, albeit more broadly than the behaviourists’ interests in the senses
(Pile 1996; Davidson 2000).
The senses pose challenges for geographers that they have not always been
successful in rising to. In successive paradigms that shaped human geography
over the twentieth century (see Johnston and Sidaway 2004) the roles of the
senses have either tended to be ignored or else simplified through assumptions
to the point of meaninglessness. For example, during the 1950s and 1960s,
positivist spatial science was the dominant paradigm within human geography.
A well-documented weakness of spatial science was that it made wildly
inaccurate assumptions about the relationship between people and the
environment, assuming simply that everyone had perfect knowledge of
the environment (indeed its conception of the environment itself was deeply
problematic). These assumptions conveniently sidestepped the fact that the
senses are unable to take in all of the information they are bombarded with,
resulting in the brain selectively filtering out a large amount of environmental
information. They ignored also that the senses each have their own range. While
many people may be able to see for many miles (albeit taking in progressively
less detail the further away we look), our senses of hearing, smell, touch and
taste are much more spatially restricted (Holloway and Hubbard 2001: 41–42).
Finally, they ignored the massive variations in the sensory abilities between
different people. These sensory differences are absolutely fundamental in
shaping people’s knowledge and experiences of the environment. It is vital,
if geographical enquiry is to be meaningful, that these differences are
acknowledged.
It was not until the emergence of behaviourism in the 1960s, in part reflecting
frustration with the crude assumptions of spatial science, that the senses
were taken seriously within human geography. Behavioural geography drew
heavily upon techniques from environmental psychology, with which it had a
fruitful cross-disciplinary dialogue. Initially it acknowledged and examined
the partiality of people’s environmental perception. However, later, more
sophisticated, manifestations of behaviourism incorporated cognition and
cognitive differences, recognizing also that people process environmental
Experiencing the city • 237
maps they produced. This was starkly revealed in a widely cited study of mental
maps of residents of different areas of Los Angeles (Lynch 1960).
Lynch undertook research with residents of a number of different
neighbourhoods in Los Angeles with varying socio-economic characteristics.
From this he produced composite mental maps from each neighbourhood that
revealed the vast differences in the perceptions and knowledge of Los Angeles
held by residents of different areas. In Westwood, for example, a wealthy,
predominantly white neighbourhood located near Santa Monica and Beverley
Hills, Lynch found that the mental maps produced by its residents were detailed
and extensive, covering much of the Los Angeles urban area. He did find though
that the levels of detail attached to different areas varied a great deal, reflecting
the fact that Westwood’s residents knew some areas only vaguely, perhaps
being aware of their location but being able to provide little, if any, internal
detail. By contrast, residents of the poorer, Spanish-speaking neighbourhood
of Boyle Heights, located near downtown Los Angeles, produced maps that
were less extensive relative to those of Westwood residents. These maps still
contained a great deal of detail but it was restricted predominately to a very
small area around their immediate neighbourhood. This reflected socio-economic
differences between the residents of the two neighbourhoods, specifically their
differential levels of mobility throughout the city. While Westwood residents
enjoyed car-based mobility to spatially dispersed sites of employment, education,
leisure and retail across the city, the residents of Boyle Heights largely relied on
the city’s poor public transport system to access more restricted opportunities
that tended to be located in or near their own neighbourhood.
Lynch’s work was pioneering in the techniques it employed and also in the
insights it revealed. It has been subject to subsequent criticism, however.
First, it reflects the bias towards the visual sense noted above. It is debatable
whether the simple, two-dimensional sketch map that Lynch used as the basis
of his research and as a representation of people’s environmental knowledge is
really able to capture the complexity of their relationships and interactions
with their surroundings. It is certainly unable to capture the contribution of any
of the senses other than the visual. It can offer nothing, for example, for those
interested in the environmental perceptions of people with severe visual
impairments. Second, while reflecting the different levels of environmental
knowledge that people possess, mental maps also reflect their differing abilities
to draw. Thus, the differences revealed in mental maps might be as much a
reflection of the varying artistic and cartographic abilities of research participants
as they are of varying levels of environmental knowledge. Finally, mental maps
themselves tell us little, if anything, about how environmental knowledge is
acquired and processed, although some studies have employed mental mapping
techniques with children of different ages and have revealed how spatial
awareness develops over time (Holloway and Hubbard 2001: 52–55).
Experiencing the city • 239
Interest among geographers in the body has moved beyond the purely sensory
in recent years (Rodaway 1994; Pile 1996; Nast and Pile 1998; Longhurst
2000; Valentine 2001). While this work has explored the ways that bodily
abilities differ between individuals, echoing some of the concerns of
behavioural geographers noted above, it has gone beyond the purely biological
to also explore the social worlds in which the body is embedded. This work is
significant here because it views the body as providing a bridge between the
biological and the social, the private and the public. It has considered the ways
in which the body is presented in different social contexts but also the ways in
which the social acts upon the body, for example, through the exclusion of
certain types of body from some spaces or the pressure on bodies to conform to
a narrow range of ‘ideal’ types and to be presented ‘appropriately’ within certain
social settings. This work has frequently noted how urban spaces are suffused
with images of such ideal bodily types, for example, through the prevalence of
advertising imagery (figure 10.3), or designed to include and accommodate only
certain types of body. One effect of this has been the social unease and sense of
exclusion among those whose bodies do not fit these ideal types or who find it
difficult to access certain spaces, for example, because of restricted mobility.
The contributions of this work are well illustrated through the considerable
and significant literature on the geographies of disability which has noted
both the ways that disabled bodies are physically excluded from some urban
spaces and also the social pressures that make disabled bodies feel ‘out of
place’ in some locations, for example, those of leisure, consumption and even
education (Gleeson 1996; Imrie 1996; Butler and Bowlby 1997; Butler and
Parr 1999; Kitchin 2000; Hall et al. 2002; Fuller et al. 2004; Imrie and Edwards
2007; Chouinard et al. 2010). Work in this vein has also explored other bodily
dimensions and their relationships to the social world, including the social
geographies of age, illness, gender, pregnancy and sexuality (for an overview
of this work see Hubbard et al. 2002, chapter 4).
The chapter now moves from the private, biological and psychological worlds
of the city discussed above to consider the social worlds of the city’s public
realm. Here we conceive of the public realm as the space where the body
comes into contact and interacts with a range of social worlds and the city’s
materiality. The public realm has long been a contested terrain within the city.
We might interpret the everyday public realm of the city with reference to three
presences that work, sometimes together, sometimes against each other. First,
it is an arena for the inscription of authority and regulation. Second, it is the
site of multiple rhythms of daily life through which wider structures are
maintained and reproduced (Hubbard 2006: 100). Third though, it is the site
of resistance and transgression, opposition to the authorities inscribed onto
the public realm and the disruption of the banal rhythms of everyday life.
We briefly consider each of these in turn. The public realm of cities is a terrain
onto which order and authority are inscribed. The landscapes of the city can be
read as expressions of the attempts of planners, architects and urban designers
to control bodies and bodies of people (see also chapters six and eight). Often
these attempts are explicit, taking the form of signs inserted into the landscape
that outline permitted and restricted behaviours (figure 10.4).
However, in other cases they can take a more subtle material form. For
example, the design of seating in urban areas is careful to produce forms that
do not allow homeless people to use them as places to sleep (figure 10.5).
The geographer David Sibley (1995, 1999) has written extensively about the
ways in which the spaces of the cities of the Global North are purified, cleansed
of forms of behaviour and social groups not deemed appropriate or desirable,
and has highlighted the importance of the design of spaces in this regard. The
urban landscape, then, is suffused with strategies of ordering and exclusion
by those responsible for its production and maintenance. These strategies are
underpinned by the practices of the management, surveillance and policing
of these spaces.
Experiencing the city • 241
The ordering and purification of urban space, though, goes beyond its design
and regulation and can be seen to permeate it entirely. The use of cultural
regeneration to refashion the centres of major cities since the 1980s illustrates
this point well. Since the widespread processes of deindustrialization during
the 1980s the centres of cities have been extensively redesigned to make them
attractive environments and assets in the attraction of external capital, in the
form of tourists, business tourists and companies. As well as being physically
redesigned, this has altered the social geographies of these spaces, making
them attractive for certain social groups while leading to others, who do not
fit the profile for whom these spaces have been designed, feeling and being
excluded.
So, the experience of the city is made, in part, through the inscription of
authority, power and regulation from above. However, it is also made
(negotiated) at ground level through the daily rhythms of movement across
242 • Issues
and through the city. Without this animation of the urban by the world’s
billions of urban citizens the city would merely resemble a sterile film set
after the cameras have stopped rolling. To only consider the city through plans,
architects’ drawings or the operations of the powerful, then, is to miss the ways
in which the city is made through the actions of its inhabitants. The world of
everyday experience that emerges at ground level is a very different city to that
which can be discerned through reading the texts of the powerful and the
inscription of authority across urban space. These representations of the city
tend to be too clean and to deny the agency of people, sometimes denying
their presence altogether (Miles 2002). Rather, the experience of the city that
emerges on the street is more messy and complex than the producers and
regulators of the city necessarily imagined. The everyday public realm of the
city then is ‘a collection of repetitive and banal actions which reproduce the
status quo, yet a site of resistance, revolution and ceaseless transformation’
(Hubbard 2006: 100).
There is a rich tradition of theoretical exploration of the everyday, especially
from a broadly sociological perspective. This is a tradition, though, that has
Experiencing the city • 243
caught the attention of urban geographers, who have been particularly drawn
to the role of space at the heart of much of this theory (Hubbard 2006).
Among the most influential of these theorists have been Georg Simmel, Walter
Benjamin, Henri Lefebvre and Michel de Certeau (for fuller discussions of
their work, see Highmore 2002a; Hubbard 2006; and for examples of their
work, Highmore 2002b). Much of their work sought, albeit through a different
lens and apparatus, to understand the ‘ambivalence’ of everyday life in the
city (the coexistence of the banal and the transformative) (Hubbard 2006: 100).
These authors explored the tensions between the capitalist mode of production
– which sought constantly, through the production of space, to repress and order
the potentials of the body – and both the body’s attraction to the rhythms of the
city under capitalist modernity and its potential to destabilize these very
rhythms through acts of resistance.
The most methodologically sophisticated exploration of the temporal and
spatial geographies of everyday life are those developed within time-geography.
This approach originated among Swedish geographers in the 1960s and became
most developed in the work of Torsten Hägerstrand (1982) (Holloway and
Hubbard 2001: 29). The basis of time-geography is the simple premise that
doing things (‘projects’ to use the terminology) both takes time and involves
moving through space (time-geographers used the term ‘resources’ to refer to
time and space). A reflection on your own daily activities highlights this. To get
to lectures you need to move through space (unless of course you are studying
geography online by distance learning, although we will come to the impacts
of technology later). Members of the class will move through space covering
different distances at different rates, some will walk, some cycle, some drive
and some travel by public transport. For some, their negotiation of space-time
(time-geographers emphasized the interdependence of the two) will be affected
by their physical condition or perhaps a disability. For many the determining
factor will be economic, a lack of money to buy a car necessitating travel to
university by bus or bicycle, for example (see chapter twelve for discussions
of the connections between social exclusion, social difference and mobility).
Time-geographers were interested in mapping these daily paths of individuals
and represented them through time-space diagrams with space as the horizontal
plane and time the vertical (see figure 10.6 for an example of a recent adaption
of this technique).
This mapping work was valuable in that it revealed that the daily paths of many,
particularly women, were more complex than others, involving multiple journeys
to different stations (for example, shops, schools, places of employment, friends
and relatives and childcare facilities). Often this coincided with a lack of access
to cars for personal mobility, increasing the time taken to negotiate these tasks.
Also, time-geography articulated a number of constraints that are inherent to the
daily paths of individuals. Three such constraints were identified: capability
244 • Issues
constraints (the limits on how far we are able to travel in a given time),
coupling constraints (the necessity for people to be spatially co-present to
achieve certain tasks) and authority constraints (legal or quasi-legal restrictions
on access to certain spaces such as bar opening hours or restricted areas in, for
example, institutions, shops or banks) (Holloway and Hubbard 2001: 31).
Recent advances in technology have opened up a debate around the ways in
which people’s daily paths, and the constraints inherent to these, might be
affected as communication technologies potentially reduce the necessity for
face‑to‑face contact between people. It is possible to envisage ways in which
coupling constraints might be loosened, for example, by the impacts of
successive waves of communications technology. We could think, for example,
of the impacts of the telephone and more recently the mobile telephone, the
internet and videoconferencing and the associated coupling practices that have
evolved alongside these technologies that have removed the universal need
for spatial co-presence for instantaneous communication. However, my own
(Tim’s) experiences as I write this passage of text highlight the complexities
of the relationships between technology and face‑to‑face communication.
The development of mobile computing technology allows me the freedom to
work away from my office, at home or in a variety of remote locations such as
libraries, archives or fieldwork sites. I do not need to be at work to do work or to
communicate with my colleagues. Technology has clearly allowed the loosening
of a coupling constraint here. At the moment, I am writing this as I speed towards
London for an editorial board meeting of a journal I am involved in. It would
have been difficult to work this way when I wrote the first edition of this book
in 1995 and 1996. Then, computers were too bulky or expensive to practically
work from while on the move, their batteries were also notoriously short‑lived.
Writing by hand is also next to impossible on a busy, bumpy speeding train,
ruling out that option for drafting text. Now all I have to worry about is spilling
coffee on my iPad.
The meeting I am going to, while mainly involving people based in the UK,
also has attendees contributing from Australia, Singapore and the US. It is
technically possible for the meeting to take place via videoconference, although
the affordability of effective technology might be an issue even for higher
education institutions and co-ordination between different time zones might be
difficult for a three-hour meeting. What videoconferencing cannot replicate,
however, is the informal sociability and bonhomie, not to mention the excellent
food, of the post-meeting meal in the Bombay Brasserie Indian restaurant.
This is justified to the publishers who pick up the tab, on the grounds that it
is crucial to the building and maintenance of social bonds between editorial
board members. The apparently sterile, dehumanized world of time-geographies
and their representations then, is actually suffused with a social richness that
undercuts the potentials of technology to loosen the functional imperatives
Experiencing the city • 245
continued
very little about the subjective, sensuous,
qualitative dimensions of these movements
and the encounters that take place within
various stations. He proposes a mixture
of techniques to address this including
interviews, researcher observations,
detailed diaries kept by research
participants and photographs taken by
participants as ways of layering qualitative
detail across the skeletal framework of
time geography (see figure 10.6). This
combination of techniques he refers to as
the diary-photo diary-interview method. This
method, he argues ‘offer[s] them [research
participants] the resources so that they can
tell a narrative about themselves that
retains a strong sense of social and
personal context’ (p. 126). It draws, for
example, on the evocative qualities of
photographs and reflective material from
diary entries and interview transcripts to
‘convey a much greater sense of the
sensual and affective elements’ (p. 127) of
individuals’ movements through the city.
Latham’s proposal potentially offers a
method of representing the rhythms of
individuals’ daily movements through the
city in ways that capture at least something
of the rich banality of everyday life upon
which we depend, typically without reflecting
upon it, and that plays such an important
role in the wider structuring of society.
Source: Latham (2004) Figure 10.6 An attempt to represent
the subjective dimensions of daily paths
using photographs, diary entries,
interviews and researcher observations
Source: Latham (2004: 128)
Summary
The experience of the city encompasses many diverse aspects. Most broadly
this necessitates an understanding of the city’s private and public worlds and
the many ways in which they come together. This chapter has moved across the
private, emotional and biological dimensions of everyday life in the city to
its more public dimensions. The example of skateboarding, discussed at
the end of this chapter, reminds us of the constant tension enacted in the public
realm between the desire to impose order through design, management and
maintenance and the desire to resist and transgress these regulatory strategies.
Many mundane, everyday, bodily acts that take place in the public realm, such
as walking, cycling, driving, eating, drinking and smoking (Fischer and Pollard
1998), are framed by the negotiation of this tension.
Follow-up activities
Essay title: ‘Everyday life in the city is shaped by the body’s mediation of the
biological and the social.’ Discuss.
A good answer would draw heavily upon recent work on the geographies of the
body which has, in many different ways, focused on the ways in which the body
acts on the social but also the ways in which the social acts on the body.
It would explore the work of both key theorists such as Pile and Longhurst and
also the rich empirical work in this area. It might, for example, draw on the
extensive and diverse literatures of the geographies of disability that are cited
above. It is crucial though that an effective essay maintains its specific focus on
the city within all of this. It might do this in two ways. First it might include a
range of examples from urban areas that would demonstrate how the city is an
environment that is shaped largely around the assumption of, for example, the
able-bodied citizen and the ways that this excludes disabled bodies. It would also
look at the issue of the social geographies of urban spaces and the ways in which
the images that saturate these spaces and the activities that go on within them
can be equally exclusionary. Second, it might look at theorists who have argued
that the city is a key agent in either maintaining or collapsing the distinctions
between private and public, social and biological. One such theorist is Richard
Sennett, whose work is cited below. Finally, and only if there is sufficient space,
the essay might cast an eye back to the history of human geography and contrast
the sophistication of recent work on the body with cruder earlier work in this
Experiencing the city • 249
area. It should not seek to be overly critical of this work though, but might wish
to discuss the ways in which it was significant in opening up new research
pathways within the subject.
Project idea
Further reading
Books
● Bates, C., Imrie, R. and Kulman, K. (eds) (2017) Care and Design: Bodies,
Buildings, Cities, Chichester: Wiley-Blackwell
A collection of essays that consider the interface between bodies, minds and
design, at a variety of scales within urban environments, and explores design
through the lens of various forms of care.
Journal articles
● Baum, H. (2015) ‘Planning with half a mind: why planners resist emotion’,
Planning Theory and Practice, 16(4): 498–516
Planning, a practice crucial to the shaping of the urban environment (see chapter
6), has tended to imagine that people act and think rationally. Traditionally
planning has made little space for the emotions of those living in and using the
city. This article is a call for planning to make room for the emotions.
● Edensor, T. (2005) ‘The ghosts of industrial ruins: ordering and disordering
memory in excessive space’, Environment and Planning D: Society and Space,
23(6): 829–849
Another example of Edensor’s imaginative engagement with the mundane and
forgotten landscapes of the city utilizing the evocative qualities of photography
as a research method.
● Gallent, N. and Anderson, J. (2007) ‘Representing England’s rural-urban fringe’,
Landscape Research, 32(1): 1–21
An interesting attempt to critically engage with attitudes towards this much-
maligned aspect of the landscape of the contemporary city. Gallent’s work is
discussed briefly above.
● Hopkins, P. (2008) ‘Critical geographies of body size’, Geography Compass,
2(6): 2111–2126
Explores the role of body size in shaping social identities through the negotiation
of everyday space.
Experiencing the city • 251
Introduction
One of the most obvious points to note about cities is that they are home
to lots of people! Indeed, housing forms the most substantive land use within
contemporary cities. Shelter is a basic human need and access to adequate
housing is an important human right. Yet a home is much more than merely
a physical dwelling within the city, it is also an important commodity to be
traded and in addition represents a key factor in shaping the identity and
place of people and households within the city. Housing is an important
determinant of personal security, comfort, wealth and status, and ownership of
housing can also be important in structuring access to other scarce resources
within the city such as employment opportunities, education and healthcare
facilities. However, it is clear that the ability of people to secure a home in the
city is highly unequal, with the problems of lack of access to adequate and
affordable housing for many urban dwellers most starkly illustrated in the
world’s biggest cities in the form of homeless people on the streets. As
more people are drawn into cities, as a result of the economic and other
opportunities perceived to be available within them, the ability of cities to
meet the housing needs of growing and changing urban populations has
become increasingly problematic. No city is free of housing problems, yet
their nature and scale is highly varied around the world, from increasing
problems of housing affordability in advanced industrial nations to how to
deal with the growth of large informal shanty settlements in many large
cities of the Global South.
Where people live within cities, and why, have been long-standing concerns
of urban geography, stretching back to the early work of the Chicago School
(see chapters two and three). As we have noted, the modern city is a highly
complex, disorganized and heterogeneous place, yet these early researchers
discovered that rather than resulting in a jumbled mass of people, the modern
city displayed a distinct mosaic, with certain household types occupying
particular niches in the city. This early work has stimulated a considerable body
of urban research considering residential patterns within cities, the residential
mobility of urban households and the operation of housing markets. This work
has been underpinned by some key questions:
Housing and residential segregation • 253
● Why do city populations get sifted out according to a range of social criteria,
such as class, race, stage in the lifecycle, to produce distinctive
neighbourhoods?
● What are the processes responsible for this sifting?
● How do people choose where to live, and what are the constraints on their
choices?
● Which groups are able to manipulate the geography of the city and to whose
advantage?
The remainder of this chapter examines why people live where they do in cities
and the role that housing plays in shaping the form and life of cities. First, it
provides an overview of some of the work examining residential patterns within
cities. The chapter will then go on to consider the processes underpinning these
patterns, focusing on ideas of choice and constraint through a consideration of
residential mobility and decision making and the operation of housing markets.
Finally, the chapter considers the key issues of access to, and affordability
of, housing, highlighting a range of contemporary urban issues, such as
homelessness and squatting.
Within his chapter on Boston in the book The Soft City, Jonathan Raban stops
to ask:
Why should the Italians all cram themselves behind the expressway in the
North End? Why should [African-Americans] live in Roxbury and Jews in
Chelsea? By what law do Boston suburbs turn into rigidly circumscribed
ghettos when they look so much alike, so quaintly attractive, so prim, so dull?
For it is as if someone had taken a map of the city and, resolutely blind to its
topography, had coloured in irregularly-shaped lumps labelled ‘Blacks’,
‘Jews’, ‘Irish’, ‘Academics’, ‘Gentry’, ‘Italians’, ‘Chinese’, ‘Assorted Others’.
(Raban 1975: 216)
present in other cities, known as social area analysis or factorial ecology (see
also chapter two).
The key points to emerge from the huge volume of empirical research
undertaken were the affirmation of socio-economic status, family status and
ethnic status as key dimensions underpinning residential differentiation and a
general consistency in the spatial expression of these dimensions in the great
majority of cities in the developed, industrial world (Knox and Pinch 2010).
Socio-economic status displayed an essentially sectoral pattern, family status a
zonal gradient and ethnicity a clustered pattern. These factors were incorporated
into an idealized model of urban ecological structure by Murdie (1969),
although his model also acknowledged that in reality the city’s ecological
structure was the result of detailed interaction with the city’s morphology and
other local conditions (figure 11.1). Factorial ecology study peaked in urban
geography in the early 1970s, declining in significance after this, although the
ideas and techniques employed are still utilized commercially in identifying
particular residential areas for the purposes of target marketing (Short 1996;
Pacione 2009).
Three key reasons can be cited for the shift away from ecological research.
First, the development of more sophisticated analyses were limited by
methodological concerns, chiefly the availability, currency and detail of census
data and the territorial units used for its collection. Concern was expressed that
similarities in patterns were the product of the similarities in data variables and
territorial units employed within censuses, which masked other patterns of
differentiation. Equally, problems of the ecological fallacy were highlighted,
where assumptions about the homogeneity of socio-economic characteristics
within territorial areas masked the reality of greater heterogeneity at the micro
scale. Linked to this, research in cities beyond North America revealed quite
different residential patterns, suggesting the importance of other factors in
determining residential structure. Second, as we have previously noted (see
chapter two), the theoretical terrain of urban geography began to alter in the
1970s. Researchers looked to move beyond the quantitative analysis of patterns
to examine the processes underpinning these patterns, opening up new ways of
approaching the study of residential differentiation. In particular, research into
residential differentiation began to focus on issues of choice and constraint in
access to housing, considering household mobility and decision making and the
operation of housing markets (see below). Finally, as we have noted throughout
this book, the city itself changed in the late twentieth century as a result of a
range of global economic, technological, political and cultural changes,
challenging the validity of traditional models and theories of the city and
opening up new issues and questions for researchers to address. These new
directions in the consideration of residential patterns are clearly exemplified by
the development of research into gentrification, a process that was seen to be
Housing and residential segregation • 255
reshaping classical models of urban structure and creating new tensions within
cities. Examination of the processes fuelling gentrification became a key focus
for debates surrounding the relative importance of economic and cultural
influences and structure and agency in determining residential patterns in cities.
Gentrification
Gentrification has certainly been a hot topic in urban geography for some time
and the volume of work that has been produced could fill a textbook on its own
(indeed Lees et al. (2008) have produced such a book). Broadly, gentrification
can be defined as ‘the transformation of a working-class or vacant area of the
256 • Issues
central city into middle-class residential and/or commercial use’ (Lees et al.
2008: xv). However, the key issue for researchers has been the issue of the
displacement of these lower income groups, which has frequently been viewed
negatively and has generated considerable reaction and protest by those
displaced (Short 1989; Smith 1996). Initially, research interest in gentrification
was prompted by the challenge that it posed to accepted ideas about residential
structure, with more affluent households moving back into the city rather than
moving outwards to the suburbs, the inverse of traditional models. However,
research into gentrification has developed to encompass a number of key
theoretical debates within urban geography generally and also within research
into residential differentiation more specifically.
At the heart of the early debates into the processes underpinning gentrification
has been a division between those who have highlighted the importance
of economic processes and those who have highlighted the role of human
agency and consumer preferences. A key figure in the development of
economic explanations of gentrification has been Neil Smith. Drawing on
Marxist understandings of the city, Smith (1996) has argued that gentrification
occurs where a ‘rent gap’ exists, which is the disparity between the potential
rents that could be commanded by dilapidated inner‑city properties or
vacant land when redeveloped and the actual rents being obtained. Where
a significant gap opens up as a result of inner-city decline, it becomes
profitable for developers to buy up properties cheaply, refurbish them and
sell them on for a significant profit. However, critics of this perspective
note that while rent gaps exist in many cities and city areas, not all become
gentrified, so suggesting that other factors are important in these processes.
In contrast to Smith, researchers such as David Ley (1996) have highlighted
the role of consumer preference and human agency in the production of
gentrification. Ley points to the importance of the emergence of a new
middle-class, or creative class (Florida 2004) in many cities, linked to the
growth of producer service jobs and cultural industries within these cities
(see chapter four). These groups seek lifestyles different to the conformity
of the suburbs and are drawn to the diverse and vibrant cultural opportunities
available in urban centres, seeking to live close to these opportunities and
therefore leading to the gentrification of inner-city neighbourhoods. Indeed,
it is argued that processes of gentrification are often started as a result of the
location decisions of pioneer gentrifiers, such as artists and other cultural
innovators. For example, the gentrification of areas such as Hoxton in London
or SoHo in New York was seen to have been precipitated by their notoriety
as the location of vibrant arts scenes (Zukin 1989; Hubbard 2006). Other
important pioneer groups have been identified, including single professional
women (Rose 1984), gay people (Knopp 1990) and students (apprentice
gentrifiers) (Smith and Holt 2007).
Housing and residential segregation • 257
continued
globally connected workers, drawn from The trends evident in Barnsbury are similar
Britain’s social elite, working in London’s to those identified in Brooklyn Heights in
financial sector who enjoy large salaries and New York, linked to its key position as a
might be seen as super-rich. These super- global financial centre (Lees 2003).
gentrifiers connect global capital flows to the
The mutation of gentrification into this new
neighbourhood level, with their global identity
form of super-gentrification has also
being projected on to the local scene.
questioned the early stage models of
Through their analysis of census data, Butler
gentrification that assumed an endpoint of
and Lees note that a tripartite socio-
mature gentrification in neighbourhoods.
economic division now exists between these
Equally, it questions ideas of a rent gap, as
super-wealthy professionals, middle-class
there is no decline in value and an already
professionals and the working-class and
prosperous neighbourhood becomes even
economically inactive in the area, creating
more exclusive and expensive.
increasing cultural divisions and tensions.
Source: Butler and Lees (2006)
linked to the wider economic, social and political forces within which the city
is positioned and which influence the local housing markets within which
decisions to move are made. In addition, not all households are equally
mobile, with some more likely to move than others; such as younger rather
than older households, private renters rather than owner occupiers. Equally,
there is also an effect resulting from the duration of residence, whereby the
longer a household remains in a dwelling the less likely they are to move,
developing an attachment to the dwelling and the neighbourhood. Spatially,
empirical studies reveal a three-fold division of the city in terms of rates of
mobility: an inner‑city zone with high rates of movement fuelled by new
migrants to the city and the establishment of new households with a high
proportion of renters; an outer zone, also with a high level of mobility, with
households taking up new suburban housing opportunities as a result of
changing aspirations linked to increasing income and changing family status;
and an older more established zone of relative stability in between where
household’s needs seem to have been satisfied (Knox and Pinch 2010: 256).
Generally, a circular and reinforcing relationship exists between urban
residential structure and household mobility. Here, household mobility is the
outcome of a set of decision making processes relating to the housing needs
and expectations of households, influenced by income, lifestyle, family
status and knowledge and perceptions of different neighbourhoods and the
housing opportunities available in the form of new or vacant dwellings. These
individual household decisions and moves then shape and reshape the social
ecology of the city which forms the framework of housing opportunities and
neighbourhood perceptions that influence subsequent rounds of household
decision making.
Exploration of residential decision-making processes developed in the 1970s,
as an area of enquiry drawing on behavioural approaches in urban geography
(see also chapter ten). The decision to move to a new residence can be either
voluntary or involuntary. Involuntary moves result mainly from property
demolition or eviction, and formed about a quarter of all moves in a classic
study of migration in Philadelphia by Rossi (1955). Involuntary moves can
also be forced by changes in family status or lifestyle (e.g. marriage/divorce,
ill health, bereavement) or changes in economic circumstances (e.g. long-
distance job change or retirement). However, the majority of moves are
voluntary (Pacione 2009).
The decision to move is underpinned by two key aspects of household
behaviour: the decision to seek a new residence and the search for and selection
of a new residence. The decision to seek a new residence is triggered by
housing stress where the current accommodation no longer meets the needs or
expectations of the household. In reviewing the literature on mobility, Clark
et al. (2006) argue that the overall trigger for mobility is a difference between
260 • Issues
Exercise
Reflect on your own household’s recent You could research this further by asking
move(s) and the triggers that underpinned fellow students, friends, family members
this/these. Was your move involuntary about their household moves. Does this
or voluntary? What was the main prompt reveal any broader patterns about migration
for the move: house, neighbourhood, in your city?
lifecycle, job or something else? In your
What are the main problems/challenges
search for a new residence, what were you
in collecting data on household migration
looking for and what search criteria did you
decisions (consider who decides, how
use (in a particular area, a particular type
decisions are made, when a move took
of home, proximity to employment/facilities,
place, etc.)?
etc.)?
Levy et al. (2008) explore the internal family housing market, estate agents can also
decision making processes involved in significantly influence the decision‑making
buying a house, which constitutes an process. Here, agents are not simply
infrequent but significant purchase for information intermediaries but are active
households. They argue that this has been a market makers, potentially leading to
relatively neglected area of research in confusion and conflict in their dual roles
residential mobility studies where attention acting for sellers and buyers.
has focused more on the external socio-
With regard to the internal family negotiations
economic influences on household decision
and power relations involved in the decision-
making. Their research uses in-depth
making process, both estate agents and
interviews with recent adult house
adult family members identified gendered
purchasers and estate agents to explore
dimensions to the process. Generally, men
their understandings and experiences of
were concerned with financial and status
buying a house in Auckland, New Zealand.
aspects of home ownership while women
Their research highlights the messy nature were more concerned with family needs,
of the decision‑making process. While although in reality the links were more
house purchase is an economic activity, complex and fluid depending on the roles
it is not a rational economic process, but adopted by men and women in the family
rather is a social activity involving emotion, structure. Links between gender and the
discussion and negotiation of the family’s decision‑making process were also affected
needs, interaction with housing exchange by other dimensions such as ethnicity,
professionals and the interpretation of the personality and experience and in addition
wider housing market. In this sense housing varied according to the stage within the
transactions are performed in power-filled search and purchase process. Both estate
negotiations between adult family members, agents and families also highlighted the
buyers, sellers and housing market important role of emotions and feelings in
professionals. the final decisions to purchase. While initial
house hunting might be more structured and
These family decision‑making activities are
systematic, final decisions were often based
shaped by family structures, gender roles,
on a general feeling which families found
ethnicity and socio-economic status. In
difficult to explain and which could also be
addition to adults in the household,
influenced by wider collectives of extended
extended family members and friends can
family, friends and professionals. The study
participate in the decision‑making process,
therefore serves to highlight the messy
sometimes influencing decisions to take an
complexity of residential decision-making
expected course. However, the extent to
processes and the importance of both
which wider social collectives influence
individual and collective feelings and
decision‑making varies by the ethnic
characteristics and broader structural
background of the purchasers, with Pacific
housing market conditions in influencing
Island and Asian families seen as more
them.
open to these influences. In the context of
Source: Levy et al. (2008)
the specific structure of the New Zealand
262 • Issues
Figure 11.2 Actors and institutions in the housing market (Bourne 1981, Figure 4.8, p. 85)
Source: Adapted from Knox and Pinch (2010: 117)
Housing and residential segregation • 263
Europe and particularly in the UK, and a decrease in the availability of cheaper
privately rented dwellings. However, more recently public authority involvement
has declined in many western cities, driven by neo-liberal political agendas to
‘roll back the state’, which has led to contractions in the public letting market
(Pacione 2009). Within many cities of the Global South the trend has been
the growth of the informal housing market beyond smaller private owner
occupied and public housing markets. Only within a limited number of newly
industrializing nations, such as Singapore, has there been substantial public
intervention and investment in housing with governments in many other
developing nations either unable or unwilling to intervene (Drakakis-Smith 2000).
A key focus of research into the operation of housing sub-markets has been the
analysis of the role of the various agents who shape the opportunities available
within these markets, known as the managerialist perspective. This work has
drawn on the ideas developed by the sociologist Max Weber, who sought to
explain social systems by considering the actions of the people who make and
sustain them, and which were utilized in the context of urban research by Ray
Pahl (1969). Pahl argued that the key to examining social constraints lay in the
exploration of the ideologies, policies and actions of those managing the urban
system, the gatekeepers within particular institutions. These gatekeepers act as
mediators between a client population and the available resources, and research
has highlighted their influence in shaping people’s sense of possibilities through
the decision making or eligibility criteria which they apply in the allocation of
resources (Knox and Pinch 2010). These criteria can be explicit in the form
of policy documents or can be implicit or tacit knowledge used within the
organization. However, while managerialist research has demonstrated
the important influence exerted by urban managers, researchers working
from a political-economy perspective have questioned the relative power of
gatekeepers, pointing out that the decisions of managers are themselves subject
to wider structural constraints and that residential patterns are shaped by
economic, political and cultural forces beyond the control of urban managers
(see also chapter two).
Exercise
negative attitudes and making housing difficult to let. Once established, negative
images of estates are persistent and can remain even following regeneration
intervention by agencies, where activities reinforce rather than challenge
neighbourhood images so perpetuating the stigmatization of the area and its
residents (Hastings 2004). To this end Hastings has argued in her research into
stigmatized housing estates in the UK, that the issue of image needs to be
managed more explicitly within housing and regeneration policies and activities.
Housing crises
As the discussion above should have hopefully revealed, there are many factors
influencing where people live and their access to housing options. What should
also be clear is that these options are quite variable and that inequalities exist in
access to housing. A key issue facing cities is that not all the people who want a
home have access to one that adequately meets their needs. Globally, the scale
of the problem is enormous with the United Nations estimating that over
100 million people lack any home, while over one billion reside in sub-standard
and insecure accommodation with no services (UN-HABITAT 2003). This has
been an enduring problem for many cities around the world; indeed, as we
noted in chapter six the development of systematic attempts to plan the growing
industrial cities of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries stemmed from
concerns about the provision of adequate housing for their growing populations.
Then, as now, the lack of good quality, low-cost social housing can be linked to
enduring problems of a mismatch between the demand for, and supply of, this
type of housing.
Key factors underpinning this continuing mismatch between supply and
demand are the issue of affordability and the changing role of the state in
housing supply. Affordability is basically the proportion of household income
spent on obtaining housing. For many in the Global South household incomes
are nowhere near adequate to secure even the most basic formal housing. In
Europe and North America recent rises in rents and house prices have led to
more households experiencing problems in affording housing, classed as those
households spending over thirty per cent of their income on housing in the
US and twenty per cent in the UK (Pacione 2009). However, affordability is
a problem of places as well as people, where in over-heated housing markets,
such as in global cities, even people with average wages can experience
affordability problems, such as key public sector workers including health
workers, teachers and police officers. These affordability problems were
exposed by the global financial crisis of 2007, when over-heated property
markets collapsed and house repossessions rose (Knox and Pinch 2010; García
Lamarca and Kaika 2016; Waldron 2016).
266 • Issues
Murphy (2009) examines the ambiguities hidden and mobile homeless. The aim
and contradictions in recent policies of the programme to refer homeless
enacted by the city of San Francisco to clients to housing units has served to
address its homelessness problem. concentrate homeless people registered on
The city was seen to have a high rate of the programme in city-funded, single room
homelessness and was also viewed as one occupancy hotels (SROs) in poor central
of the most punitive in terms of its anti- areas of the city, as a result of the lack of
homeless measures. However, in 2004 the other available housing options. While for
newly elected Mayor, Gavin Newsom, began some this accommodation represents an
to usher in a ‘kinder and gentler’ policy improvement over living on the streets,
regime that aimed to provide legitimate others have noted that much of this
and compassionate assistance for the accommodation remains sub-standard and
homeless. The ‘Care not Cash’ policy imposes restrictions on those in the units,
offered referrals to housing and services for viewing them as clients to be monitored
homeless adults rather than cash handouts. rather than as tenants. In addition,
While this was seen as a controversial move requirements to look for work while being a
by some, it was also viewed as a successful resident represent a tradeoff that many
strategy by many in the city and beyond to homeless people will not accept and
reduce the numbers of the city’s homeless. therefore serves to remove them from
However, based on her research Murphy programme lists.
highlights the deeper complexity of this
Despite these problems with the SROs
initiative and argues that while being less
there is a waiting list to be placed in a
punitive than their predecessors, the
hotel and many homeless men and women
policies have introduced new exclusions
remain waiting in the city’s emergency
in service delivery, new definitions
shelter system. The problems faced by many
of the deserving poor and new degrees of
homeless people in accessing or staying in
homeless marginalization, which are
these emergency shelters mean that further
obscured by the language of compassion.
people disenroll from the programme. Many
Broadly, these softer strategies are
homeless people view the shelter system
reserved for those willing to comply with
as stressful, fragmented, frightening and
policy programme requirements, while those
difficult to navigate, characterized by
homeless seen as non-compliant continue
transience and flux with shifting rules and
to be targeted with more punitive tactics.
regulations and centres frequently closing
Murphy highlights the ways in which these down and opening up in different areas. This
changes are played out in the city’s spaces constant waiting and transience means that
of service provision, identifying three many homeless people stop seeking support
key homeless geographies in the city: in the shelters and remain on the streets.
institutional geographies of housing and This can be wrongly perceived as ‘service-
hotels, protracted geographies of referral resistance’ on the part of the authorities.
and waiting and spectral geographies of the It is these groups who continue to be the
Housing and residential segregation • 269
continued
target for punitive measures by the police as the city’s homeless navigate their way
their lives are visible on the street and through them, it is possible to observe the
therefore they inhabit spectral geographies ways in which the city’s homeless are sifted
of constant hiding and movement in order to and sorted into the deserving and
avoid harassment and to feel safe. undeserving poor and how different soft or
Therefore, by examining these geographies hard policies are applied.
of homelessness in San Francisco, and how Source: Murphy (2009)
Summary
In this chapter we have considered the issue of why people live where they do
within cities. The city can be viewed as a residential mosaic, with different
household types occupying particular housing niches within it. Housing is
an important component of the urban landscape and access to adequate
accommodation is an important aspect of people’s life and place within the
city. However, access to housing and the operation of housing markets in cities
is highly diversified and also unequal, underpinned by a complex mix of
individual household choices and decisions operating within wider institutional
and structural constraints. Housing problems exist within all cities, with
growing problems of housing affordability and homelessness in many cities
around the world. In many cities of the Global North, rising property prices,
processes such as gentrification, and a decline in the availability of social
housing and private rented accommodation, have fuelled problems of housing
affordability for lower, and some middle, income groups and has also led to
increasing homelessness. In many megacities of the Global South, the growth
of informal squatter settlements and the visible homeless starkly illustrate the
widening gulf between the demand for, and provision of, good standard
affordable housing. Consequently, housing provision remains a significant
challenge for urban managers in the twenty-first century.
Follow-up activities
Essay title: ‘To what extent are economic factors responsible for residential
segregation within cities?’
An effective answer would outline the ways in which residential areas of cities can
be segregated, drawing on classical urban models of residential structure. It would
then review the variety of factors that are seen to underpin segregation (economic,
270 • Issues
political, cultural) and consider the issue of choice and constraint in the residential
decision making undertaken by households, evaluating the relative significance of
these factors in producing patterns of segregation. An excellent answer would
further examine the complexities of the residential decision-making process and
the dynamic relationships between broader structures and the actions of various
actors in the process. The case study by Levy et al. (2008) would be relevant here
in examining these complexities from the micro scale perspective.
Project idea
Consider whether there is evidence of a ●● Does the city have a high number
‘housing crisis’ in your city or a city that is of homeless people? You might talk
familiar to you. You can examine this issue to the local housing authority to
in a number of ways, drawing on some of see if they have information on
the themes introduced in this chapter, for numbers of people waiting for homes
example: and the types of policy adopted to
●● Using data from local property agents or tackle homelessness problems.
the local press consider the prices for Consider whether the local authority
housing in the city compared to average provides housing or not. You might also
wages (use local census data or again find out whether homeless charities
use the local press to look at wage rates or shelters operate in your city and
for jobs in the city). How big is the might interview those running these
affordability gap (rough definitions are organizations to gain their views on the
provided in this chapter)? housing issues facing your city.
Further reading
Books
Journal articles
Websites
Introduction
Transport and mobility, or the lack of it, are seen as fundamental concerns in
terms of the organization and operation of the modern city. Much of life in cities
is concerned with trying to get somewhere and the increasing pace, scope and
complexity of journeys and communications has generated renewed interest in
this area of study, linked to the wider ‘mobilities turn’ within the social sciences
(Sheller and Urry 2006; Creswell 2006). As Creswell (2006: 3) notes, while
mobility can be thought of as a ‘brute fact’, it also carries significant meaning as
something that is practised, experienced and embodied. Scholars working within
a mobilities paradigm have increasingly been interrogating the spaces of transport
flows within the city to critical enquiry, illuminating the practices and powers
involved in the everyday activity of moving around. Additionally, with rising
levels of urbanization globally, the impacts of increasing inter- and intra-urban
mobility, specifically the environmental impacts associated with increasing
vehicle-based mobility, are contributing to key global urban challenges for the
twenty-first century, namely, combating climate change and city sustainability
(see also chapter 13).
The chapter first considers the links between transport, mobility and the city
and then continues by exploring urban transport and mobility issues at different
scales. At the global level the chapter considers urban connectivity, the growth
in air transport and the contribution of urban transport to global concerns such
as carbon emissions, climate change and pollution. At the intra-urban level, the
chapter examines the ‘governmentality’ of transport and the challenges for
urban transport policy and planning. The chapter concludes by looking at
transport and mobility as an embodied practice, highlighting the importance of
considering movement as a cultural practice, beyond an instrumental act of
physical displacement. This scalar separation does not imply that there are
separate transport and mobility concerns at different urban scales, but rather the
chapter will demonstrate that these concerns interweave within the ‘intransitive’
or fluid and multi-scalar city (Hubbard 2006: 165).
274 • Issues
Region Total daily trips Proportion of total Proportion of total Proportion of total
per capital, trips by non- trips by motorized trips by motorized
trips/person motorized modes, % public modes, % private modes, %
The impact of the car on city morphologies is therefore not a simple division
between Global North and South, and levels of car-based mobility in cities
vary greatly around the world. This variability is linked to a range of economic,
cultural and environmental factors underpinning the varying density of urban
areas, including differences in land availability, planning systems, development
industries, and cultural preferences for urban living (Hickman and Banister
2014). Generally, more densely populated cities tend to be characterized by
lower levels of car use (fuel consumption), with more use of alternative modes
of transport (Figure 12.1).
Population density is therefore a greater influence on levels of car use in cities
than income levels, as many wealthy European cities that have high population
densities are characterized by relatively low levels of car use (Hickman and
Banister 2014, Rode et al. 2014). At similar wealth levels, sprawling Atlanta
generates six times more private vehicle related carbon emissions than compact
Barcelona. The same is true of wealthy Asian cities such as Tokyo or Hong
Kong, with these higher density cities generating fewer emissions (Rode et al.
2014). Research into emissions in different Chinese cities of similar wealth
indicates that those with lower densities and greater sprawl generate more
transport related carbon emissions (Rode et al. 2014). This strong inverse
relationship between car use and urban population density underpins much
compact city advocacy as a route to the promotion of more sustainable urban
mobility (UN-HABITAT 2013). However, current global trends indicate that
276 • Issues
sprawl is increasing, with the amount of urban land expanding, most rapidly in
cities of the developing world, with estimates suggesting that the total urban land
area globally could triple between 2000 and 2030 (Rode et al. 2014). Equally,
urban densities are decreasing, most notably in the developed world, although
more recently there has been re-densification in some European and North
American cities (Rode et al. 2014).
It is not simply the physical interrelationship between transport infrastructure
and the city that is important, and mobilities research has increasingly sought to
examine the co-production of urban technological and socio-cultural change.
The ‘mobilities paradigm’ has been underpinned by the principle that mobility
is something fundamental to contemporary culture, where the desirability of
increasing speed and movement is central to the organization of modern society
and life in cities more broadly (Sheller and Urry 2006). As Creswell (2006: 15)
notes, the term ‘modern’ evokes images of technologically enhanced mobility
– the car, the plane, the spaceship. These metaphors and images appear in
futuristic views of the modern city in film, art and architecture (see also
chapters 8 and 9). Subsequently, the idea of what constitutes the modern city
and a successful life within it, for policy makers and urban populations alike,
has been profoundly influenced by these metaphors of speed and the desire
for faster, freer movement, underpinned by the automobile as the pre-eminent
symbol of that freedom and mobility (Creswell 2006).
The central role of free and fast mobility to contemporary culture and social and
economic organization has led urban theorists to think about the city differently.
The city is increasingly described through a range of ‘hydraulic’ metaphors
and is conceived of as a hyper-mobile global space of different flows of people,
goods, services, capital, information, images and ideas linked to increasing
global connectivity (Virilio 1986; Castells 1996; Massey 1999). Paul Virilio
Transport, mobility and the city • 277
Fuller and Harley (2004: 140) discuss the emergence of the ‘aviopolis’, the
networked and dispersed city of the air, which turns mobility and connection
into a productive force that produces value in the global economy and in the
process reshapes a city and its infrastructure. The growth in international air
transport, both passenger numbers and freight movement, makes the point
that urban networks are becoming more globally dispersed, and illustrate air
transport’s role in shaping the global urban system as the preferred mode of
intercity movement for the transnational business class, migrants, tourists and
high-value, low bulk goods:
Quick, cheap regular air travel is one of the major enablers of space-time
distanciation, the process whereby more and more social relations are
routinely maintained at a distance, so that, for example, intercontinental
business travel and transaction are regarded as commonplace.
(Hubbard 2006: 166)
Table 12.2 Top 15 airports 2015 (ranked by departures, passengers and freight)
Atlanta (US) 441,249 Atlanta (US) 50,744,944 Hong Kong (CN) 4,379,762
Chicago (US) 437,568 Beijing (CN) 44,969,314 Memphis (US) 4,289,377
Dallas/Fort 340,622 Dubai (AE) 39,005,133 Shanghai (CN) 3,178,985
Worth (US)
Los Angeles (US) 327,782 Chicago (US) 38,471,247 Anchorage (US) 2,624,312
Beijing (CN) 295,085 Tokyo (JP) 37,658,359 Dubai (AE) 2,505,507
Denver (US) 270,607 London (GB) 37,494,957 Incheon (KR) 2,489,662
Charlotte (US) 270,607 Los Angeles (US) 37,352,061 Louisville (US) 2,262,650
Las Vegas (US) 265,165 Hong Kong (CN) 34,165,405 Tokyo (JP) 2,085,275
Houston (US) 251,422 Paris (FR) 32,885,644 Taipei (CN) 2,008,703
Paris (FR) 237,888 Dallas/ 32,036,234 Frankfurt (DE) 1,993,467
Fort Worth (US)
London (GB) 237, 051 Istanbul (TR) 30,918,391 Miami (US) 1,970,616
Frankfurt (DE) 234,077 Frankfurt (DE) 30,516,011 Beijing (CN) 1,889,830
Amsterdam (NL) 232,761 Shanghai (CN) 30,026,694 Paris (FR) 1,861,197
Istanbul (TR) 232,433 Amsterdam (NL) 29,142,424 Singapore (SG) 1,853,000
Shanghai (CN) 224.107 New York (US) 28,422,625 Los Angeles (US) 1,846,010
first in terms of freight traffic (ICAO 2015) (table 12.2). Table 12.2 also
highlights the absence of African cities from the top international airport
rankings in terms of passenger and freight volumes. O.R. Tambo International
Airport near Johannesburg is the busiest airport in Africa with just over 19.6
million passengers in 2014–15 (Airports Company South Africa 2016), below
the 20th ranked airport globally (ACI 2015). However, we must be cautious
about what these flight frequency, passenger number and freight tonnage data
actually represent in terms of the nature of urban connectivity
and influence, as these bold figures reveal little about who, or what, is actually
travelling and why.
McNeill (2014) notes that the development of mutually supportive
partnerships between the state, airport authorities and airline carriers can
produce significant benefits in terms of the positioning and branding of the
city-region as a global business space (see case study). Airport and container
port infrastructures are important mechanisms through which people,
organizations and firms are able to manage extra territorial relations and
extend their influence regionally and globally, and are a visible manifestation
280 • Issues
of world city interactions (McNeill 2014). The development of air travel has
consequently had a significant impact on the territorial organization of many
cities, with major international airports becoming an important aspect of
contemporary urban life and key gateways to the city (McNeill 2014)
(figure 12.2).
The development of an airport represents a substantial investment in terms
of sunk costs, and as such ‘represent long-term accumulations of finance,
technology, know-how, and organizational and geopolitical power’ (Graham
and Marvin, 2001: 12). Much of the sunk costs associated with new airport
development tend to be spent on improved surface accessibility, through the
provision of high-speed public rail access and increased road capacity, and the
Transport, mobility and the city • 281
Urban travel currently constitutes more than 60 per cent of all kilometres
travelled globally and, as a result, urban transport is currently the largest single
source of global transport-related carbon emissions and the largest local source
of urban air pollution (Rode et al. 2014). Between 1960 and 2010, the number of
registered cars globally increased from about 100 million to 700 million,
and registered trucks and buses from 30 million to 300 million, and by 2035
the total registered vehicle fleet is estimated to grow to 1.7 billion (Rode et al.
2014). In developing countries, motorized two-wheelers also account for a
substantial proportion of vehicles, with 114 million added to global totals in
2013 alone (Rode et al. 2014). All regions of the world are forecast to continue
their growth in vehicle ownership per capita. Although the levels in Asia and
Africa will remain comparatively lower than in Europe, North America and
Australia, these regions are predicted to experience significant growth in
vehicle ownership levels and distances travelled throughout the first half of the
twenty-first century. However, some caveats must be put on predicted increases,
as transport projections have often been proved wrong, and the ‘peak-car’
hypothesis suggests there will be some decreases in ownership in some
developed economies (Rode et al. 2014). While this increased mobility will
bring economic benefits to many, it will impose increasing and interconnected
burdens on wider urban societies. This will contribute to further rises in urban
transport emissions globally in the longer term and contribute to rising levels
of air pollution in the growing megacities of the Global South in the short
term (UN-HABITAT 2013; Hickman and Banister 2014). These trends are
inconsistent with the objectives that cities and governments are attempting
to achieve, and it remains a significant challenge for cities around the world to
achieve these substantial reductions in greenhouse gas emissions, while also
achieving the economic and social objectives of sustainable urban development
(May 2013; Hickman and Banister 2014) (see also chapter 13).
The dominance of the car has brought with it a range of social, economic and
environmental problems. These revolve around the negative impacts generated
by the car on the environment (toxic emissions, noise and vibration), people
284 • Issues
(road accidents, health problems, the loss of public space to roads and parking
and the severing of communities by road development) and on economies
(congestion and the costs associated with managing car-based mobility)
(Hall, 2003; Rode et al. 2014). The rising congestion associated with
increasing car use imposes significant economic costs to cities, with
New York City estimated to lose US$13 billion annually to congestion
(Rode et al. 2014). For middle income developing cities the costs can be
higher, with Mexico City and Buenos Aires estimated to lose 2.6 and 3.4 per
cent of their gross domestic product to congestion, respectively (Rode et al.
2014). Additionally, vehicles stuck in traffic generate more emissions posing
greater environmental and health problems through pollution, while the rise
in car numbers imposes greater safety risks on pedestrians, cyclists and
powered two-wheel users (May 2013). However, these negative impacts are
not evenly felt and fall most heavily on non-car users, a disproportionate
number of whom are from low-income groups, and who occupy areas of
heavier traffic within cities.
Rode et al. (2014) note that the key strategies available to urban policy makers
to tackle the problems of motor vehicle congestion are to avoid (reducing travel
through physical proximity), shift (to non-motorized transport modes), or
improve (the efficiency of transport). In assessing the contribution of a selection
of common policy instruments, May notes that no single instrument performs
best against all sustainable transport objectives (Table 12.3), highlighting that
effective strategies are based on a combination of different types of approach
(May 2013). Traditionally, urban transport planning has looked to technological
Scenario 4:
Scenario 2: Sustainable Mobility
Clean Hyper Mobility Huge take up in public
Increased mobility, transport, walking
but using low emission and cycling; and low
vehicles emission vehicles;
urban planning
Environmental Environmental
Stewardship: Low Stewardship: High
Scenario 1: Scenario 3:
Business as Usual (BAU) More Active Travel
Incremental policy Large investment in
change, no strategic walking and cycling,
direction; limited urban planning and
investment in public some limited investment
transport, walking, in public transport,
cycling and low emisson particularly inter-urban
vehicles connections
control combined with public transport enhancement, and land use planned in
conjunction with transport strategies (May 2004). Similarly, European cities
such as Freiburg, Vienna and Zurich have effected reductions in car use by
using a combination of demand management, public transport improvements
and land use planning (Buehler and Pucher 2011). London has pursued a
progressive policy to reduce greenhouse gas emissions through urban
development built around multi-modal public transport provision, cycle hire
schemes and the introduction of congestion charging in the central area and
inner urban low emission zones (Hickman and Banister 2014) (Figure 12.4).
This has led to declining levels of car ownership, increases in cycling and
a rise in passenger transport numbers in the city (Rode et al. 2014). These
more holistic approaches which work with the existing urban framework,
acknowledge the limitations of earlier compact city arguments for extensive
reurbanization as a means of achieving sustainable urban development and
reductions in car travel, critiqued by Michael Breheny in terms of their false
assumptions about compact and decentralized urban forms, their failure to
consider wider socio-cultural factors which influence travel behaviour, and
Transport, mobility and the city • 287
their failure to acknowledge the social and physical costs associated with the
extensive replanning of cities (Breheny 1995).
Rather than focusing solely on the extensive replanning of cities to achieve travel
change, policy makers have also looked to try to influence people’s travel choices.
Initiatives to promote sustainable urban travel behaviour change are either based
around the promotion of ‘substitution’ or ‘switching’ (Marshall et al. 1997) (see
exercise). Substitution can involve making linked trips, rather than multiple single
journeys, using technology such as electronic communication to replace physical
travel or trip modification, where a trip is modified by type, such as replacing a
shopping trip with mobile goods delivery. Switching can either involve mode
288 • Issues
switching, such as walking rather than using the car, destination switching,
shopping locally rather than a distant location, or time switching, travelling at
off-peak, less congested times. Information is important to promoting behaviour
change and developing public support for projects, including real time
information for public transport passengers and awareness raising in terms of
travel options (May 2013). However, to be successful, solutions proposed need to
include effective consultation and participation in the policy formation stage, so
that people can participate in developing their own ‘travel futures’ (Hickman and
Banister 2014).
Exercise
Think about your journeys around the city/ What does your experience tell you about
town where you live: the challenges of sustainable transport
planning for cities?
What types of journey do you normally make
and how (to university/college, shopping, If you can, do this exercise as a group,
work, leisure, hobbies/activities)? and discuss and compare your responses
to the questions. Even in a small group
Do these journeys have any particular
your journey types, times and transport
transport constraints (do you have access
modes should illustrate the complexity
to a car, or are there issues with train/bus
of daily mobility patterns and reveal your
routes and times, for example)?
attitudes to your own mobility. If you scale
Could your journeys have been substituted up your small ‘survey’ to the city-scale you
in any way (linking, technology, modification) can perhaps begin to appreciate the
or switched (mode, destination, time)? complexities and challenges for transport
planners in tackling issues and changing
What are the challenges to modifying your
behaviours.
journeys (substituting or switching)?
While there is some consensus in terms of what policy instruments are needed
to tackle car-based mobility and promote sustainable urban transport, there
remain significant barriers to effecting change. Central to these challenges
are the problems associated with the translation of transport policies to
different cities. Barriers to delivering sustainable urban transport initiatives
included poor integration and coordination across different policy areas,
counterproductive institutional roles between different arms and levels of
government, unsupportive regulatory frameworks, weaknesses in financing
and pricing for transport initiatives, poor data quality and quantity for
monitoring impacts, limited public support, and lack of political resolve
for change (European Conference of Ministers of Transport 2006) (see also
chapter 13). Transport systems in existing cities represent a considerable
investment and can take a long time to change, with cities becoming locked in
Transport, mobility and the city • 289
The discussion above of the problems in effecting travel behaviour change and
addressing mobility inequalities reminds us that mobility in cities carries
significant meaning as something that is practised, experienced and embodied.
Jensen and Lassen (2011: 10) suggest that urban mobilities are constitutive for
the structures that frame social life where cultural actions and identities are
produced and reproduced, but also that social structures (economic, political
and spatial) are constitutive for the ways mobilities develop. Jensen (2013)
considers how actual and concrete mobilities are ‘staged’ through an array of
physical, social, technical and cultural conditions that influence their ‘staging’
from above and below. The physical setting, material spaces and design aspects
of mobilities contribute to staging from above, while social interactions and
embodied performances stage from below. Consequently, we need to consider
the embodied nature of mobile subjects, their social and psychological
engagement with lived space, and how these intertwine with the material
systems of the city and its policy frameworks.
As we noted previously, discourses about mobility are powerful co-players in
the shaping of modernity, and are a part of the fabric upon which the city and
social relations are built. These powerful discourses mould mobility practices,
supporting certain social aspects of mobility while simultaneously silencing
others, and contributing to the shaping of our emotions, desires and wants
towards mobility (Jensen 2011). As Jensen (2011: 268) notes:
Focus on the formation of our modern selves through mobility related
rationalities, on emotions and the feeling of mobile technologies and places,
on ambiences and atmospheres thus suggests that power in relation to
mobility…also works in ways that connect just as much to what we do as to
what is put into words …
So, as Jensen argues, while written policy and plans have an important role in
shaping mobility practices, our unnoticed and taken-for-granted actions and
emotional responses to mobility have an equally powerful place in reinforcing
particular mobility discourses, inducing pleasures and working on our desires as
much as they coerce, discipline and normalize practices (Jensen 2011). In this
respect, ideas around automobility and freedom of movement are particularly
powerful in imprinting their logics and desires on the making of our modern
selves (Thrift 2004; Urry 2007).
As Harada and Waitt (2012: 145) note: ‘the challenge of changing driving
behaviour becomes evident when this practice is conceived of as a bodily habit
co-constituted within an automobile assemblage’. The motions and emotions
related to automobility are not only a kinaesthetic bodily and sensory experience,
but are also entangled in cultural, social and family practices.
Transport, mobility and the city • 291
Doughty and Murray (2016) examine how key discourses on mobility permeate
society and embed in everyday mobile practices. They identify five key
institutional discourses of ‘western’ mobility that have underpinned transport
policy; technocratic, rights to mobility, mobile riskiness, speedy connectivity
and sustainable mobility. Their ethnographic study of mobile experiences and
everyday practices of families living in Brighton, UK examines mobile practices
as social texts embedding or resisting these wider discourses (Doughty and
Murray 2016). The contradictions of these institutional discourses are evident
in the everyday mobile practices of the people surveyed, as they negotiate
sustainable mobility concerns alongside discourses that simultaneously position
mobilities (especially automobilities) as central to the exercise of individual
rights of freedom, economic success and citizenship. For many respondents, the
car was narrated as symbolic of a transition to adulthood and working life, and
thus central to personal success and independent mobility, offering freedom,
possibilities and fun. Equally, the car was viewed positively as a controlled
environment of one’s own that could be shaped and managed, unlike the public
realm which could be threatening and challenging to negotiate. For those
encumbered with parenting responsibilities, the car was a way of managing
modern life efficiently and effectively, undertaking activities which would be
more difficult and complex to accomplish using other forms of transport, such
as accessing buses and trains with young children or making multiple linked
trips. Themes of legitimacy and freedom were set against perceptions of moral
responsibility and guilt for younger participants who were more aware of
sustainability discourses through their school learning. However, concerns
about the need to engage with more sustainable mobilities were frequently
resisted at the micro-level of everyday embodied engagements:
… because it is easily overshadowed by mundane social and material
constraints and affordances; and by bodily dispositions and disabilities. It is
the often overlooked and obscured mundane sensate relationships that people
have with mobilities and mobile spaces that hold most significance in
constituting mobile behaviours.
(Doughty and Murray 2016: 319)
included amongst the active corporeal engagements of human bodies with the
sensed space (Jensen et al. 2015). However, Merriman (2015) notes that much
of this research remains within the context of western mobility experiences, and
there is a need to examine the diversity of mobile experiences and mobility
cultures in cities across the world to develop our understanding. Recently, the
journal Transfers has set itself the task of publishing trans-disciplinary and
transnational research that goes beyond Western experiences and paradigms and
bridges this gap in understanding (Mom and Kim 2013). Equally, much of the
writing in this area focuses on individual embodiments and affects, rather than
their collective circulation through social networks and relations to others.
However, urban mobility is always a collective project and one person’s
mobility patterns can have a direct impact on another’s capacity to be mobile.
There is a need to consider mobile subjects as clusters of interacting agents,
not simply singular and individuated actors:
Different mobility practices and options are experienced and practised
through the ‘rhythms and relationships’ of those mobilities, including the
child who is driven to school, the bus driver who greets the elderly regular
and the worker who handles the business traveller’s luxury suitcase in the
airport.
(Jensen 2011: 266)
Within households, if one member changes his or her means of mobility, for
example by deciding to ride a bicycle to work one day or to take the only car
available another day, then the other household members must adjust to this
choice (see case study).
The research explores the everyday mobility the opportunities they afford. Participants
of eleven households with children in the used mode choice and route choice to
multi-modal transport context of manage stress or elicit positive feelings
Copenhagen, Denmark. Data from and to form familial relations. For some,
household interviews demonstrate how car journeys to and from work offered the
everyday patterns of relational mobility are space for relaxation, a chance for ‘family
filtered through spatial affordances, time’, or a personal space for planning
affective ambience and temporalities of the and work. Others thought driving stressful,
life course to influence transport with concerns about traffic and roadworks,
alternatives of route and modal choice. preferring to use a bike and the train to get
to work. Routes were chosen not always
Respondents in the study spoke differently in a ‘super logical’ way, but were about
about their specific emotions towards making respondents feel better through the
transport modes, which were reflected in process of moving. Bike riding and routes
Transport, mobility and the city • 293
continued
were related with their stress-relieving respondents making adjustments to their
properties and the idea of ‘clearing the routes in response to the rhythms of car
mind’, and routes varied depending on traffic at different times of the day.
time of day, relating to both changing Additionally, choreographies of household
emotions going to and from work and the movement involved rhythms of synchronicity
desire to avoid negative feelings relating and asynchronicity in journeys, coordinating
to the perceived security and safety of differing family commitments, such as
particular areas. shopping or family leisure activities, and
times of being together and apart as a family.
The rhythms of the household were also
important in shaping mobility patterns, What this small study demonstrates is the
covering a whole range of differing complex ways in which mobilities are
temporalities. In daily journeys the rhythms of negotiated, enacted and experienced within
the household and the pulse or metabolism different households within the city.
of the city often overlapped, with cycling Source: Jensen, Sheller, and Wind (2015)
Research into the relationship between walking and the city has also sought to
illuminate the significance of social encounters to the ways in which pedestrian
practices unfold in the public realm, and how everyday life in the city is
negotiated through these encounters. Middleton (2016) uses diary and interview
accounts of walking in London, UK to consider how people articulate their
everyday pedestrian practices and negotiate the micro-politics of pedestrian
encounters. Tensions and conflicts emerge between pedestrians and other
urban walkers and cyclists, such as not obeying traffic signals and spaces
appropriately, highlighting how mobility actively shapes citizen relations.
This constitutes an emergent everyday politics of how people appropriate space
on foot and illuminates wider concerns about the ‘right to the city’. Whether
driving, walking, bus riding, bicycling, or train passengering, each journey
within the city has its own embodied dispositions, instinctual feelings, rhythms
and affective resonances (Jensen et al. 2015). As people string together chains
of activity, they are not only choosing routes, but also moving between different
affective experiences of mobility and different emotions in relation to place
and with others. All this helps to understand the complexity of transport and
mobility in the city from below, and examine its lifeworlds and rhythms and the
differential experiences of the urban world as embodied (see also chapter 9).
Middleton’s (2016) research into walking also reflects a key contribution
of this type of mobilities research in terms of experimentation with the use of
‘mobile methods’ that can capture, perform and intervene in processes of urban
movement as they happen (Jensen et al. 2015) (see also case study in chapter 10
and exercise below). Mobile methods try to capture the complex and dynamic
processes of moving via following-the-thing and participant-observation on the
move, using methods such as walkalongs (walking-with, audio walks), mobile
294 • Issues
Exercise
You might explore your own journeys around diversity of journeys around your urban
the town or city you live in, or your journey areas and the varying emotions they elicit.
from where you live to your university/
Also, if you, or your academic department,
college, using the mobile methodologies
have access to GPS technology, and/or a
outlined in this chapter (or Latham’s
small video camera, you might film your
diary-photo, diary-interview method outlined
movements and also track your routes
in chapter 10). Keep a diary recording your
through the city, building up a more detailed
journeys over a week, not just noting down
picture of your experiences and how these
where you go and how, but also thinking
relate to the wider rhythms of the city, again
about your emotions while travelling, the
comparing this to Jensen et al.’s study of
impact of others on your journeys and the
Copenhagen.
feeling of the places you are travelling
through (as in Jensen et al.’s (2015) study Finally, you might also like to develop this as
outlined above). Do any of the issues a creative exercise, and look to express the
outlined by Jensen et al. resonate with your emotions of your movements in the city as
experiences? You might do this as a class prose, poetry, art or film as different ways in
exercise and compare your experiences to which geographers look to understand the
try and illuminate the complexity and city and its rhythms.
Summary
Transport and mobility are central to the functioning and development of the
city, both in terms of its internal working, and the lives of people within the
city, and also in terms of connectivity and the place of a city within global
urban networks. The development and image of the modern city is strongly
associated with transport technology and the idea of faster, freer movement,
particularly embodied in the automobile and the aeroplane as symbols of this
Transport, mobility and the city • 295
Follow up activities
Essay title: Cutting the impact of private car travel is arguably the most
important issue for urban transport planning in the twenty-first century.
It is also one of the most difficult issues to tackle successfully. Discuss.
Project idea
Try and assess the ‘urban accessibility assess these policies to consider what the
pathway’ that your urban area has followed key aims and objectives are and what ideas
in the last twenty years or so, depending on about transport planning underpin these. Is
the information available to you. Firstly there an emphasis on sustainable travel
consider the different types of transport options, or is planning for the car dominant?
mode available and look to see if there is Is development focused on infrastructure
any statistical information available on the delivery and technological solutions or
proportion of trips that people make by changing travel behaviours? If there is not a
these different modes and if this has current plan, this might be instructive in
changed over recent time (your local itself in highlighting a lack of political will in
municipal authority would be a good addressing transport issues explicitly (you
potential source for this travel information). might follow this up by setting up a
If data are not available, you might consider discussion/interview with city leaders/
conducting your own travel survey, devising planners). If specific plans are currently
a questionnaire to assess a sample of being implemented you again might carry
residents’ travel behaviour. out your own survey to find out what local
residents make of these ideas, whether
Once you have some information on travel
they have had any impact on their travel
behaviour, you can then look at current
behaviours and whether any specific barriers
and, if available, recent past policies for
exist to their effective implementation.
transport planning in your area. Critically
Further reading
Books
● Cidell, J. and Prytherch, D. (eds) (2015) Transport, Mobility, and the Production
of Urban Space, Abingdon: Routledge
Collection of writings with a diverse, international focus that explore the
connections, in theory and practice, between transport geographies and ‘new
mobilities’ in the production of urban space.
● Dennis, K. and Urry, J. (2009) After the Car, Cambridge: Polity Press
An imaginative look at the future of motorized transport and its likely
consequences for the reconfiguration of cities. Perhaps better titled: ‘The car but
not as we know it’.
● Grieco, M. and Urry, J. (eds) (2011) Mobilities: New Perspectives on Transport
and Society, Farnham: Ashgate
Not a specifically urban text, but a collection that draws together a wide range of
recent perspectives on mobility and looks to bridge the earlier transport/mobility
research divide.
Transport, mobility and the city • 297
● Hickman, R. and Banister, D. (2014) Transport, Climate Change and the City,
Abingdon: Routledge
Key text discussing the challenges of sustainability facing urban transport
planning, which includes in-depth case studies of current problems and future
scenarios from cities across the world.
● Jensen, O.B. (2013) Staging Mobilities, Abingdon: Routledge
Important work bringing together Jensen’s key research and which develops
his conceptual idea of mobilities as ‘staged’. A companion volume, Designing
Mobilities (2014), looks to apply this theoretical perspective to urban planning
and design.
● Kasarda, J. and Lindsey, G. (2011) Aerotropolis: The Way We’ll Live Next,
London: Allen Lane
Popular scholarly work which looks at the increasing significance of airports to
the city and their impact on business practices, and urban life more broadly, in an
increasingly globalized world.
● UN-HABITAT (2013) Planning and Design for Sustainable Urban Mobility:
Global Report on Human Settlements, Abingdon: Routledge
Key global overview of the key issues and challenges facing sustainable urban
transport planning.
Journal articles
● Freire-Medeiros, B. and Name, L. (2017) ‘Does the future of the favela fit in an
aerial cable car? Examining tourism mobilities and urban inequalities through a
decolonial lens’, Canadian Journal of Latin American and Caribbean Studies,
42(1): 1–16
Provides a case discussion of the impact of aerial cable car systems as a transport
solution to provide access to hillside favelas. Employed in a number of Latin
American cities, questions are raised as to the extent to which these high-cost
systems help ease the accessibility problems of the poor residents of these areas.
● Kenworthy, J. (2014) ‘Total daily mobility patterns and their policy implications
for forty-three global cities in 1995 and 2005’, World Transport Policy and
Practice, 20(1): 41–55
Relatively rare comparative consideration of changing mobility patterns between
cities, looking at car travel, walking and cycling and public transport use.
Focused mainly on cities in the Global North, although also drawing comparison
with Taipei and São Paulo.
● McLellan, A. and Collins, D. (2014) ‘“If you’re just a bus community … you’re
second tier”: Motivations for rapid mass transit (RMT) development into
mid-sized cities’, Urban Policy and Research 32(2): 203–217
298 • Issues
Websites
● http://www.carfree.com/
Site of a pressure group promoting alternatives to car-based urban mobility.
Contains a wealth of resources.
● http://www.wbcsd.org/Projects/smp2
Website for the World Business Council for Sustainable Development’s
sustainable mobility project illustrating business-led approaches to tackling
urban transport planning in cities, offers cases studies of demonstrator/trial city
projects.
● https://www.gov.uk/government/organisations/department-for-transport/about/
statistics
Transport statistics for the UK. Equivalent sites for other countries available.
Transport, mobility and the city • 299
● http://www1.uwe.ac.uk/et/research/cts
Centre for Transport and Society at the University of the West of England,
Bristol. One of a number of university transport research centres. Based in
an Environment/ Technology Faculty, while others are based in Engineering
Faculties.
● http://www.lancaster.ac.uk/cemore/
Centre for mobilities Research at Lancaster University. Pioneers of the mobilities
paradigm.
13 Urban futures
The challenge of creating new and, one hopes, superior forms of settlement
has occupied philosophers, architects, planners and urban theorists for
centuries.
(Pacione 2009: 615–616)
The complex nature of urbanization across the globe, and the seemingly
insurmountable challenges of transforming urban futures require multi-
disciplinary, multi-stakeholder research efforts across diverse geographies.
(Friend et al. 2016: 67)
Introduction
The world faces many imminent and interrelated challenges. These include
those associated with population growth and migration, climate change,
environmental degradation, food and resource pressures, economic inequalities
and social divisions and diverse and dispersed geopolitical security concerns
(Chen et al. 2013; Kilcullen 2013; Hou et al. 2015). In essence many of these
concerns are urban in nature: growth in population is concentrating in cities;
mobile, consumption oriented city lifestyles in the Global North are major
contributors to climate change; cities draw upon food and other resources from
across often global hinterlands in order to sustain themselves and generate
waste which needs to be disposed of; and cities are frequently the sites of
conflicts, terrorist attacks, organized criminal activities and other geopolitical
flashpoints. Although demographic, environmental, resource, socio-economic
and geopolitical issues have been intimately intertwined with processes of
urbanization throughout history, the unprecedented global urban growth of the
late twentieth and early twenty-first centuries has generated the sense of their
present urgency (Pacione 2009: 605). The UN-HABITAT World Cities Report
2016 summarizes eight ‘persistent issues and emerging urban challenges due to
increased urban population’ as:
Urban futures • 301
● urban growth;
● change in family patterns;
● increased residency in slums and informal settlements;
● challenges in providing urban services;
● climate change;
● exclusion and rising inequality;
● insecurity;
● upsurge in international migration.
(UN-HABITAT 2016: 2)
There is a growing recognition, therefore, across many realms of urban theory
and practice, that questions of making a better, more sustainable world are, to
a large extent, questions of making better, more sustainable cities (Caprotti
2014: 1285). As Friend et al. (2016: 67) argue, ‘it is in the urban arena that
much of the struggle to avoid a global climate catastrophe while achieving
social development objectives will be played out’. These are questions that
challenge urban residents, authorities, planners, developers, researchers and
students alike (Kourtit et al. 2014: 1).
While these questions are global in nature they are also locally contingent
at the same time, reflections of the complex mosaic of different urban
patterns and processes across the world which were outlined and discussed in
chapter 1. Cities have to both attend to their immediate local urban issues
which, in Detroit, for example, might include the extensive abandonment
of its neighbourhoods as its economy continues to decline and its population
shrink (Chen et al. 2013: 326) and, in São Paulo, the persistence, growth and
intractability of its informally housed favela populations (Smith 2008). At the
same time these and other cities have to attempt to pursue paths of development
that do not compromise the pressing global issues outlined above. Briefly, to
recap some of the discussions of contemporary world urbanization patterns and
processes from chapter one, it is apparent that the global urban landscape is
being reshaped in a variety of ways in different regions and across different
types of city. This includes: the continued urbanization of the developing world,
both in large megacities and smaller settlements, the latter of which might lack
the institutional capacities to successfully balance the immediate needs of their
growing populations with the global impacts of this urbanization (Chen et al.
2013: 348); the massive current and future growth of the urban populations
of the rising economies of China and India – China, for example, will add
221 cities with populations of more than one million by 2025 (the US by
comparison currently has only nine such cities) (Chen et al. 2013: 336; Simon
2016); the expansion of several large US urban agglomerations to absorb
surrounding smaller settlements producing extensive ‘cities of cities’, ‘a
continual string of cities, suburbs, absorbed CBDs, special purpose districts,
parks, recreation areas, some empty areas – multi-nuclear, multi-nodal,
302 • Issues
Any discussion of future cities must start with the recognition that much
urbanization that has occurred throughout history is environmentally
unsustainable. The processes and patterns of urbanization that have prevailed
across the world to date have been overwhelmingly based on the extensive
acquisition and use of natural resources which has, over time, absolutely depleted
the global reserves of these resources, created patterns of local and regional
scarcity, generated problems of waste and pollution and generated additional and
ongoing demands that are satisfied only by the further acquisition and use of
these diminishing resources (Chen et al. 2013: 300–301; Simon 2016). It is now
clear that ‘The world’s cities cannot continue to prosper if the aggregate impact
of their economies’ production and their inhabitants’ consumption draws on
global resources at unsustainable rates and deposits waste in global sinks at
levels that lead to detrimental climatic change’ (Pacione 2009: 606).
Unsustainability implies that at some point in the future, development will be
compromised as environmental capacity is reached or environmental limits
are breached. The question of what, and where, environmental limits and
capacities are, is a not unproblematic thought. Views on where these limits lie
depend on whether one adopts a robust or a precautionary stance towards the
environment’s capacities (Mohan 1999) and whether one holds that these limits
are ‘technical, cultural and social rather than environmental’ (Rapoport 2014:
140). Environmental capacities are undoubtedly far from fixed and absolute.
They may expand as new technologies come on-stream, genetically modified
foodstuffs, being one example. However, many apparent technological panaceas
might compromise environmental capacities in other, initially unforeseen, ways
(Hinchliffe 2007).
The sheer scale of the impacts of cities on the environment through their use
and disposal of resources of all kinds is conveyed well by the concepts of the
304 • Issues
ecological footprints and the global hinterlands of cities (Haughton and Hunter
1994; Blowers and Pain 1999; UN-HABITAT 2016). For cities to function they
need to draw upon and, consequently, impact upon vast areas of land and water
from beyond their own immediate geographical hinterlands. Cities draw
resources, materials for construction and consumption, food,
energy and so on, from all over the world. They also disperse pollution and
waste locally, regionally and globally. The ecological connections stemming
to and from cities can be visualized by the idea of the ecological footprint.
Rees and Wackernagel’s classic definition of the ecological footprints of cities
comes in the form of a question: ‘How large an area of productive land is
needed to sustain a defined population indefinitely, wherever on Earth that
land is located?’ (2013: 159, originally published in 1996). The ecological
footprint of the Canadian city of Calgary has been calculated at 100 times the
area of its city limits (The City of Calgary 2007), while that of Santiago de
Chile was in the 1990s calculated as being 16 times larger than its metropolitan
area (Wackernagel 1998: 16). The idea of the ecological footprint, despite its
complexity and its undoubted limitations, helps to visualize the sheer scale
of the impacts of cities on the environment and also the ways in which cities in
the Global North impact significantly more per capita than those in the Global
South. Clearly, if sustainable urban development is to be achieved, significantly
reducing the ecological footprints of cities is an imperative (Girardet 1996:
24–25; Gottdiener and Budd 2005: 158; Pacione 2009: 609–610; Simon 2016),
and this is an imperative that falls most heavily on the cities of the Global
North, although this does not always translate into action by these cities or their
national governments.
The concept of sustainable urban development, typically based around
principles of intergenerational equity, social justice, trans-frontier responsibility
(Pacione 2009: 606), has been increasingly central to discourses of future
urban development. The idea of sustainable urban development implies
that there might be urban development trajectories that do not necessarily
involve an inexorable march towards non-renewable resource depletion and
environmental overload, but that can continue, in theory, indefinitely while
remaining within, rather than breaching, environmental limits. The most
commonly cited definition of sustainable development is that put forward
by the Brundtland World Commission on Environment and Development
(1987): ‘development that meets the needs of the present without compromising
the ability of future generations to meet their own needs’. The difficulty with
this definition is that, beyond basic survival, the concept of need is socially
constructed and is not absolute. Blowers and Pain (1999: 265) point out, for
example, that ‘what may be regarded as needs in the cities of the North would
be luxuries in those of the South’.
Urban futures • 305
Exercise
One of the key issues in the definition of of these cross-cultural differences for the
sustainability is socio-economic and definition and promotion of sustainable
cross-cultural differences in the definition of urban development? Will the urban societies
needs, wants and luxuries. Can you think of of the Global North, or perhaps certain
a definition of ‘needs’ in the context of the sections of these societies, be prepared to
cities of the Global North? What would you recognize that what they might have long
argue is a ‘need’ in this context? Indeed is regarded as needs are seen, viewed from
it possible to come to a consensus about another perspective, as wants or luxuries?
this? Does this definition of ‘needs’ hold up Can lifestyle changes in these cities follow
when transferred to the context of cities of on from this? How is this change achieved
the Global South? What are the implications and what are the barriers to this?
Thus, there is a broad consensus within the literature that there are multiple
dimensions of sustainability (Gottdiener and Budd 2005: 158, 161; Chen et al.
2013: 342). This is the triple bottom line of environmental, social and economic
sustainability mentioned above, although some writers’ versions of this
articulate five dimensions of sustainability, economic, social, natural,
physical and political. These dimensions are not separate but, rather, are
deeply interrelated. There is a growing consensus that they are unlikely to be
achieved separately. Thus, Chen et al. (2013: 345) have argued: ‘Economically
deprived cities that are socially divided and exclusive are [even] more difficult
to sustain’. The challenges of sustainable future cities then, are not just
environmental challenges. David Simon (2016), and the other authors who
contributed to the book Rethinking Sustainable Cities, see such cities as needing
to be accessible and fair as well as green, a position echoed by others such
as Friend et al. (2016: 68) who argue that future challenges for cities are
‘ensuring wellbeing, social justice and equity for an ecologically viable future’.
Elsewhere Hou et al. (2015: 4) have recognized that ‘scientists, policy-makers,
and academics increasingly acknowledge the interdependent nature of built and
natural environments and the consequent challenges such relationships suggest
in the advancement of urban sustainability, social equity and political
empowerment’.
That climate change poses major and multiple threats to cities and that it
has become a priority for cities is now widely recognized (Bulkeley 2013;
Bulkeley and Betsill 2013; Chen et al. 2013: 348). The river and littoral
locations of many cities, particularly those in the Global South experiencing
rapid population growth, make them environments increasingly susceptible
to unpredictable, severe flooding events associated with rising sea and river
levels and growing incidence of extreme storms. The uncertainties associated
with these processes and their manifestations pose complex challenges for
decision-makers and planners (Chen et al. 2013; Kourtit et al. 2014: 1; Friend
et al. 2016: 68). Cities, particularly large cities, are typically the economic
powerhouses of wider, sometimes, extensive, regions. The impacts
of the devastation and disruption associated with flooding often go beyond
the immediate damage and inconvenience associated with the flood events
themselves and include considerable longer-term economic, not to say social,
costs (see case study below).
The impacts of climate change on cities are mediated through their particular
urban geographies. The physical environments of cities shape the short-term
impacts of climate change associated events. Patterns of flooding, for example,
are shaped by local topographies. However, these physical geographies are
overlain by the social geographies of wealth and poverty which further mediate
these impacts. The environmental problems in cities tend to impact most
severely on the poorest and hence most vulnerable groups in urban society
and upon the places in the city that they tend to occupy (Chen et al. 2013:
310). These groups are less able to insulate themselves from the impacts of
environmental problems. They tend to occupy more marginal land, in shelter
that might be informal or have access to only very basic infrastructures. The
contrast between the environmental risks borne by poorer, vulnerable urban
groups, for example, and the comparative lack of risks faced by the wealthy
in cities of the Global South bears this out most clearly. Although to a lesser,
but by no means insignificant, extent the same applies to the cities of the
North. As Haughton and Hunter argue: ‘Cities are the centre for the creation
and redistribution of major environmental externalities. These are passed on
unevenly, both within the city and outside’ (1994: 52). This applies to both the
immediate externalities generated by urbanization such as pollution and also
their more long-term consequences such as the impacts of climate change.
308 • Issues
Wealthy urban populations are typically more able to protect themselves from
climate change impacts, either by investing in technological fixes such as air
conditioning, which mitigate the immediate effects of extreme heat waves
(while, ironically, indirectly contributing to their greater future occurrence
through heavy energy consumption), or by choosing to live in, typically more
expensive, locations which are likely to be less severely impacted. Flooding,
for example, impacts most heavily upon the poorest in large cities, especially
those in precarious informal habitation. Similarly, deaths during heat waves,
which, while they attract less attention, are greater in the cities of the US
than those associated with more dramatic earthquake, flood, and tornado
events, disproportionately affect the urban poor who are less able to afford air
conditioning units and may live in greater social isolation due to higher crime
rates and a lack of public infrastructure within their neighbourhoods (Chen et al.
2013: 348). There is evidence also that the subsequent responses to disruptive
environmental events within urban areas are not necessarily socially benign.
It has been observed, in the case of Hurricane Katrina that devastated New
Orleans in August 2005,
not only that disasters disproportionately affect poor and minority
communities but also that the rebuilding that follows disasters can perpetrate
or exacerbate these inequalities … the inequalities present before disasters
tend to be amplified during and after these events, lending an important
social dimension to these purportedly ‘natural’ catastrophes.
(Chen et al. 2013: 306–307)
continued
climate change, both in terms of its causes coordinated several adaptation initiatives,
and impacts on Lagos. In 2015, Peter Elias albeit somewhat ad hoc in nature. These
and Ademola Omojola, from the have included a range of environmental
Department of Geography at the University advocacy programmes and annual climate
of Lagos, published a critical assessment of change summits, adaptation strategies
the challenges that climate change poses aimed at improving food security,
for Lagos city and state, and the responses maintaining and expanding provision of
to them. sea walls and storm water barriers,
Lagos faces a number of risks from climate relocation of vulnerable populations and
change including sea level rise, storm climate sensitive urban renewal and
surge, flooding, high temperatures and high infrastructure provision programmes.
rainfall intensity. Its vulnerability to these The state government has also developed
hazards is exacerbated by social factors a climate change adaptation policy
including the city’s high population density (2012–2014) which is subject to a cycle
and its large poor population. Rising of three-yearly review and which aims to
temperatures, for example, have coincided harmonize the state’s various climate
with high population densities and poor change activities. In addition, this is
drainage to worsen the impacts of disease articulated with key international climate
in the city and surrounding areas. This has conventions, treaties and protocols. The
severe human health consequences, state has also recognized the importance of
particularly amongst children and the strengthening institutional capacity within,
elderly. Lagos’s institutional weaknesses for example, its emergency services and its
also limit its ability to respond effectively to Ministry of Agriculture and Cooperatives, to
such issues. addressing climate change concerns. In
addition to these adaptation initiatives, the
While Elias and Omojola acknowledge that
state is also involved in many mitigation
engagement with the climate change agenda
efforts such as waste reduction and
has taken place in Nigeria, they recognize
management strategies, infrastructure
that this has been somewhat uneven
provision, tree planting, promoting the green
across different levels of government.
economy and improving public transport
This is particularly serious as others have
provision and infrastructures.
recognized the importance of co-ordinated,
multi-level ‘urban’ governance of climate However, Elias and Omojola recognize
change (Bulkeley and Betsill 2013). The arenas that the state has failed to fully
federal government has long been active in engage within climate change initiatives,
climate change activities, but this has been responses and decision-making processes.
less the case at the state and, especially, These include local government, non-
the local levels. Lagos State’s government governmental organizations, the private
have begun to engage with climate change sector and vulnerable coastal and other
initiatives as evidenced by their joining the communities, particularly those from
C40 Large Cities Climate Leadership informal settlements or those engaged in
network in 2007. This led to the formation informal activities. This undoubtedly limits
of a climate change unit, part of the state’s the effectiveness of adaptation programmes
Ministry of Environment, which has within the state. The authors offer the
310 • Issues
continued
damning judgement that Lagos’s responses which has resulted from severe weather
to climate change have been ‘haphazard, events of various kinds. While this has
largely top-down, uncoordinated and prompted action across various levels of
fragmented’ (2015: 74). Certainly, there is government this has been variable and
much at the neighbourhood level in terms incomplete in its reach, and there remains
of risk and adaptation potentials that much that needs to be done to strengthen
remains unknown and untapped. Lagos’s and expand the responses of this
vulnerability to climate change, a function vulnerable, increasingly populous urban
of its physical, social and political region.
geographies, has become increasingly Source: Elias and Omojola (2015)
apparent through the extensive damage
The relationships between climate change and cities do not flow one way.
While climate change has major impacts on cities, cities are also major
contributors to processes of climate change. While occupying only around two
per cent of the world’s land surface, cities now contain more than one half of
the world’s population. Cities also consume three quarters of the world’s
resources and generate a majority of its waste (Blowers and Pain 1999: 249).
Curbing this voraciousness is the key goal of the urban sustainability agenda
discussed above. The environmental demands of city dwellers vary enormously.
For example, city dwellers in the Global North typically generate up to twice
as much waste per day as those in the South (Haughton and Hunter 1994: 11).
Whereas, for much of history, the consequences of these problems were
primarily local, the scale of contemporary urbanization ensures that they are
now felt across multiple scales including globally. Cities, then, are both the
arenas which contribute most to the causes of climate change and also, if
sustainable ways of urban living can be found and operationalized across a
range of urban environments, the arenas that can contribute most to its
management and mitigation (Castán Broto and Bulkeley 2013: 92).
Since the early 2000s cities have increasingly sought to integrate climate
change concerns into their pursuit of wider urban goals, priorities and
agendas. This has often been driven by elected officials who have been
responsible for the emergence and growth of a number of transnational urban
networks, which are either explicitly organized around addressing climate
change or which have come to recognize the importance of climate change
issues to cities and of cities to these climate change issues. These networks
include the Climate Protection Agreement, signed by over 1,000 city mayors
by 2011, the European Covenant of Mayors, which had over 2,000 members by
2011 and the C40 Cities Climate Leadership Group, a network of 40 global
cities (Bulkeley and Betsill 2013: 140–141). Evidence from an extensive,
global review of urban climate change experiments, which is discussed below,
suggests that membership of these city networks is strongly associated with the
Urban futures • 311
Fuel switching
Enhancing energy efficiency
Mobility demand reduction measures (reducing
travel)
Mobility demand enhancement measures
(alternative means of travel)
Carbon sequestration Urban capture and storage
Urban tree-planting programmes
Restoration of carbon sinks
Preservation and conservation of carbon sinks
Carbon offset schemes
Adaptation Cooling services and designs
Measures securing energy and water supply
Flood protection
Bushfire protection
Relocation and zoning policies
Blue and green infrastructure
Building codes for extreme weather
Early warning systems
Behaviour-based measures
Source: Castán Broto and Bulkeley (2013: 95), adapted from UN-HABITAT (2011)
Key parts of these attempts to green capitalism have been attempts to green
processes of urbanization through the development of more sustainable
future cities. As Rapoport argues: ‘translated into the urban arena, ecological
modernization promises that technological and procedural innovation can solve
urban environmental problems … Accordingly, many contemporary eco-cities
rely heavily on technology as a means for achieving their sustainability
objectives’ (2014: 138). There is huge diversity to urban projects under the
banner of ecological modernization in terms of their scale, the actors involved
and their specific foci. However, the most prominent discourse of future
urbanization is the concept of the eco-city. Within this there is also a powerful
technocratic discourse of smart urbanism. These should be regarded, given
their diversity, as no more than two umbrella concepts. Joss (2011: 280)
defines eco-cities as ‘a development of substantial scale, occurring across
multiple sectors, which is supported by policy processes’ (cited in Rapoport
2014: 139). Smart urbanism is specifically concerned with the potentials
of new technologies and interactive infrastructures to shape cities in ways
that potentially offer ‘a futuristic solution brought to the present to deal with a
broad multiplicity of urban maladies, including issues of transport congestion,
resource limitation, climate change and even the need to expand democratic
access, amongst others’ (Luque-Ayala and Marvin 2015: 2106–2107). There
is an extensive literature that offers guides to the emerging geographies of eco
and smart urbanization (see, for example, Joss 2011; Chang and Sheppard
2013; Cugurullo 2013; Caprotti 2014; Rapoport 2014; Luque-Ayala and Marvin
2015). One of the key themes to emerge within this critical literature is the
warning that these developments do not necessarily offer panaceas to present
and future crises and that may reproduce, albeit in different contexts, existing
patterns of urban inequality and injustice.
There are four main arguments that have emerged within the critical literatures
of eco and smart urbanism in recent years. The first is that environmental
concerns are not nearly as central to these modes of urbanization as their
advocates claim (Rapoport 2014: 138–142; Luque-Ayala and Marvin 2015:
2110 and see case study below) indeed, it has been argued, eco-ness might be
attached to some of these projects largely for marketing purposes and to
distinguish them from other rival projects of urban development (Chang and
Sheppard 2013 in Rapoport 2014: 142). While this is not to dismiss the
environmental claims and ambitions of these projects entirely, they should be
seen more accurately, critics would argue, as part of a series of objectives, prime
of which is capital accumulation through the attraction of outside investment.
The context of these eco-cities, as part of international networks of competitive
urban spaces, should not be dismissed within readings of their ambitions.
Rapoport argues that ‘most eco-city projects claim to incorporate
environmental, economic and social aspects of sustainability. However, a
Urban futures • 317
Since the late 1980s there has been much more superficial levels and were far from
prominent rhetoric concerning sustainable central to the project.
urban development, a significant proportion
Masdar City was planned by Foster and
of which covers the apparent potentials of
Partners, a globally-known architectural
the eco-city model. The three dimensions of
practice. It is a 6km2 development which
sustainability that have emerged from this
utilizes the latest green technologies such
literature are the economic, the social and
as smart utility grids, concentrated solar
the environmental. What has been somewhat
power and electric personal rapid transport,
lacking, until recently, are empirical
as well as technologies designed to
evaluations of the substance of sustainable
reduce energy consumption. The early
urban and eco-city rhetoric and development. prominence of the project attracted the
Federico Cugurullo, a geographer based at involvement of companies such as General
King’s College London, aimed to address Electric, Schneider and Siemens as well
this by evaluating the degrees to which these as support from a number of international
three dimensions were present, and the environmental organizations. The initial
relations between them, in the Masdar City optimism in the potentials of Masdar City
eco-city project in a paper published in the was shaken by the credit crunch of 2008
Journal of Urban Technology in 2013. Masdar and this resulted in the reduction of some
City, a master-planned city, intended initially of the project’s ambitions. For example,
to be zero-carbon and zero-waste, was rather than being zero-carbon, the city
launched in 2006 and is the most developed became carbon-neutral and the electric,
eco-city project available to study to date. personal rapid transport (PRT) system,
By 2010–2011 when the fieldwork for which was originally planned to cover all of
Cugurullo’s paper took place, while it was the development, was scaled back to cover
still under construction, the core of the city only ten per cent of its total area. The
was complete and the first residents had financial backing from the Abu Dhabi
moved in. Cugurullo argued that Masdar government has been reduced and the
City offered not just a model of future deadline for completion of the project
sustainable development but of urban pushed back from initially 2016 to 2020,
planning more generally making it an then 2025 and since possibly to 2030.
important site to understand the shaping
Despite the undoubted impact of the
of urban futures around the world. His
recession on the development of Masdar
analysis of Masdar City referenced the
City, Cugurullo was keen to stress that this
triple-bottom line of sustainable
did not derail the eco-visions of the city,
development: environmental, social and
rather it revealed more starkly than would
economic sustainability. However, the
otherwise have been the case, its inherently
findings of his analysis were damning and
commercial orientations. Cugurullo’s
he was able to argue that while the
analysis reveals the city as a site which
economic dimension has been central to combines the characteristics of a laboratory,
the development of Masdar City, social and in which green tech products from the
environmental concerns were present only at companies backing the development are
318 • Issues
continued
tested in a real-world setting, and a Despite these problems, Masdar City
permanent showroom for these products still argues that it is one of the world’s
which, if they are successful, are most sustainable places. However, Cugurullo
incorporated into the fabric and landscape of counters this by suggesting that the idea of
the city. These technologies are further Masdar City as an eco-city was something
promoted through Masdar’s web-portal The that was created discursively prior to its
Future Build and two major annual renewable construction. Since this image was created
energy events organized by the Masdar for the development, Cugurullo argues that
Initiative: The World Future Energy Summit much of the plan has changed, with only ten
and the European Future Energy Forum,
per cent of the development having been
which Cugurullo, who undertook fieldwork at
realized to date. Further, Masdar City had
these events, described as more akin to
not, at the time of Cugurullo’s research,
trade fairs than forums or summits.
released any data relating to its
There is a requirement, imposed on the environmental performance, thus, it is
development by the Abu Dhabi Planning impossible to verify any claims
Council, for 20 per cent of the housing in as to its environmental performance. In
the development to be reserved for low summary, Cugurullo is able to claim that
income workers. However, concerns Masdar City is primarily a project of capital
emerged within Cugurullo’s research that accumulation rather than of sustainable
this remains underdeveloped with little social and environmental development.
apparent idea of how it will be realized. This Further, given its vulnerability to downturns
would appear to be a largely symbolic in the economic cycle, he argues, that
attempt at realizing social justice within Masdar City has all of the resilience of a
Masdar City. There is no evidence elsewhere
‘sandcastle’.
in the city of how the growth generated by
the technological developments might be Source: Cugurullo (2013)
shared equitably between its citizens.
but which are excluded from eco and smart city thinking and doing because of
their limited potential to be turned into future revenue streams for corporate
developers. This may, then, have the dual effect of compromising the potentially
positive ecological outcomes of this city building and also of excluding those
who are unable to engage with the technologies of eco and smart cities either for
reasons of poverty or for reasons of culture or practice. These exclusions,
Rapoport argues, may apply to the majority of the world’s urban dwellers and
point to a third, related, criticism of eco and smart city development, namely
that they may intensify, rather than reduce, patterns of inequality and exclusion
within and between cities (Caprotti 2014: 1296; Luque-Ayala and Marvin 2015:
2108). One of the most direct ways in which this occurs, but by no means the
only way, is through the exploitation of migrant workers who provide the labour
for the production of eco-cities. Eco-cities have been described as a form of
enclave urbanism (Wong 2011; Caprotti 2014: 1293), which is little connected
to wider urban spaces, networks and systems and thus does little by way of
engagement with, or address of, the broader urban and environmental problems
that they purport to offer solutions to. Caprotti points out that ‘these exclusive
developments provide environmental ‘goods’ to those who can afford to live
within the eco-city – while little attention is paid to those who built it, or to
those who live in its shadow or on its fringes’ (2014: 1293).
320 • Issues
Finally, Caprotti (2014: 1289–1290) questions the discourses of crisis that are
often mobilized to justify eco and smart city models of development.
He does not argue that ecological change stemming from urbanization and
industrialization is not real or that its impacts are not severe and socially and
economically mediated. Rather, he suggests that these processes are presented
in particular ways, most notably through narratives of crisis, that appear to
both render them addressable, primarily or exclusively, through high-tech
driven eco and smart urbanism, and to suggest that this course of action is a
natural response to these crises, rather than a political position rooted within
sets of specific economic interests. These crisis discourses then posit the actors
behind eco and smart city development, typically powerful corporate interests
and national governments, as those most empowered to address them. Such
discursive boundary drawing is an important component in the justification of
the emergence of modes of future urbanization which do not fundamentally
disrupt prevailing economic relations and are active in the marginalization of
more radical, disruptive alternatives. Caprotti sums up this criticism by arguing
that ‘economic and technological interventions are justified and rationalized not
for what they frequently are – speculations, for profit investments, and projects
devoid of socio-political equity – but as shining examples of high-tech
responses to crisis’ (2014: 1297). Having said all this, however, the potential
contributions of eco and smart cities should not be dismissed entirely. Some
authors recognize that these models may increase awareness of sustainable
urbanization and provide experimental contexts within which new ideas might
be tested (Rapoport 2014: 144; Evans et al. 2016), while it has been recognized
that smart cities offer the potential, in some contexts, for ‘more “community”,
“civic” or “metropolitan” forms of service provision and urban life’ (Luque-
Ayala and Marvin 2015: 2108).
It has been widely argued, both within this chapter and across the literature it
draws on, that to shape urban futures in ways that are more sustainable is
only achievable if approaches encompass economic, social and environmental
dimensions in ways that are balanced. This points towards approaches
grounded more in areas such as resilience theories and social ecological systems
perspectives (Friend et al. 2016: 67) and, perhaps, less in the technocratic and
commercial world views that have proven so influential within eco and smart
city practice. Inclusive, more democratic cities, to follow this logic, cities where
communities rather than corporations, have control over the decisions that
shape their spaces and resources, are more sustainable cities (Harvey 2008;
Chen et al. 2013: 345–346). Achieving this degree of democratic control of city
spaces and resources is a major challenge in that it goes against prevailing
Urban futures • 321
neoliberal market logics. As the discussion of eco and smart cities above shows,
powerful corporate and political interests are adept at negotiating potential
crises, indeed in presenting them to their advantage, to ensure the reproduction
of their hegemonic positions. The narration of ecological crisis discussed
in the previous section, and the discursive boundary drawing that goes with
this, certainly locates such ambitions outside of hegemonic modes of future
urbanization which seem to be squarely built around the ideas of eco and smart
urbanism discussed earlier. David Harvey outlines the fundamental nature of the
transformation towards truly inclusive, democratic cities in his discussion of
the right to the city in ways which are difficult to imagine being incorporated
into eco- and smart city practices and discourses.
The right to the city is far more than the individual liberty to access urban
resources: it is a right to change ourselves by changing the city. It is,
moreover, a common rather than an individual right since this transformation
inevitably depends upon the exercise of a collective power to reshape the
processes of urbanization. The freedom to make and remake our cities and
ourselves is, I want to argue, one of the most precious yet most neglected of
our human rights.
(Harvey 2008: 23)
However, the nature of the problems that city professionals, at all levels, face
seem to demand not just that they become more attuned to the issues and
considerations outlined above but that they become prepared to approach
322 • Issues
problems in entirely new ways, and ways that may not fully, indeed at all, accord
to their traditional practices. Friend et al., for example, discuss climate change as
a wicked problem for cities, a wicked problem being one that is characterized by
complexity, uncertainty and incomplete knowledge. Such a problem, they argue,
‘requires plural solutions, clumsy governance and flexible, learning-oriented,
and adaptive institutions [which] stands in direct contrast to the core foundations
of public administration theory and practice, which require efficiency,
transparency, and accountability’ (Friend, et al. 2016: 69). As part of this they go
on to argue that responses to these problems should be networked and involve
connections between cities, often cities distant in space, rather than territorially
defined in the ways that they have traditionally been. This recognizes that the
challenges that this chapter has discussed, exceed individual administrative
units and are characterized by interconnections between often distant spaces
and formerly discrete sectors of society and the economy. Further, achieving
the global transformations necessary to address current and future challenges,
would appear to require political action across multiple scales from the local to
the global (Friend et al. 2016: 69). While the potential limitations of existing
forms of urban governance, planning and production, in the faces of these
challenges, are becoming more widely recognized, we are only at the very
earliest stages of transforming them in ways that future challenges demand.
We cannot be sure that they will fully achieve these transformations given the
challenge of marrying the long-term visions that these challenges require with
more immediate and local priorities. Within the broad realm of future urban
challenges there are a number of specific dimensions which are major in
themselves. These include engaging with the cities of the Global South, and
recognizing their experiences and perspectives, through democratic practices
rather than by imposing Northern perspectives that may not be appropriate or
through unequal, even exploitative relations (Friend et al. 2016: 70). Further, the
challenges of achieving sustainable mobility, within and between cities, as the
previous chapter showed, will be central to achieving desirable global urban
futures (Pacione 2009; 614; Chen et al. 2013: 316).
Given the range, complexities, interconnections and uncertainties associated
with the challenges facing the urban world now and into the future, perhaps
the starting point is to acknowledge that we do not have anything approaching
complete knowledge or even any degree of certainty of how specifically
we should approach these challenges. Increasingly our approaches to these
challenges are likely to be characterized by experimentation and reflective
learning. Perhaps then, as Evans et al. argue, we should see the global urban
future as one in which we are required to embrace the potentials of our cities
as sites for experimentation.
Experimentation forms a common thread running through otherwise disparate
contemporary urban trends, from corporatised attempts to create smart, low
Urban futures • 323
Summary
Follow-up activities
An effective essay would outline a little of the history of the idea of sustainable
urban development, noting the advocacy of a blended approach combining
the three dimensions above. However, it would also recognize the critical
academic literature, such as those papers by Caprotti and Cugurullo which are
discussed in this chapter, which have emerged within discussions of sustainable
urban development particularly in recent years. Much of the subsequent
324 • Issues
discussion is likely to be evaluative and based upon the review of other analyses
of sustainable urban development projects from a variety of geographical
contexts (no specific geographical region is noted in the essay title so it is
safe to assume that case studies can be drawn from any region). If this was a
research project rather than an essay then you might conduct your own original
analysis of a sustainable urban development project, or a number of different
projects. A really effective answer would also contain some discernible nuance.
For example, rather than trying to arrive at a single conclusion you might look
for subtleties that emerge from your analysis. For example, are sustainable
urban development projects of one type, or those found within one region more
balanced in their incorporation of the three dimensions listed in the essay title
than others? You should take the opportunity for the conclusion to be more than
just a summary of the essay, although this should be part of this section. For
example, are there any limitations in the sustainable urban development
literature that restrict what you are able to conclude or which point towards
future research agendas?
Project idea
Many universities now have research Universities in the Global North – a few
groups that explore the relationships are listed below. Do they tend to research
between climate change and cities and are issues of climate change and cities by
concerned with finding ways in which future looking at cities in the Global North or in
urbanization can help address the causes of the Global South? Can you find any
climate change and making cities more examples of research on climate change
resilient to its impacts. The majority of and the cities of the Global South by the
these research groups are located in the research groups based in universities in the
relatively well-resourced universities of the Global North? How does the geography of
Global North. Can you find any such units urban climate change research mirror that
located in the Global South? If so what is of the urban climate change experiments
the nature of the research they are doing that were explored in Castán Broto and
and in what cities is this research based? Bulkeley’s (2013) paper, which found that
Look at the projects listed on their websites only two per cent of the climate change
or at the publications of their researchers. experiments that they reviewed were taking
place in the world’s least developed
How does this compare to the climate
nations? On the basis of your research do
change research being done on cities
you think urban climate change researchers
located in the Global North by researchers
are doing enough to support the world’s
based there? Look at the websites of a
populations that are most vulnerable to
selection of research groups based in
climate change?
Urban futures • 325
Further reading
Books
Journal articles
The paper finds that it is not population growth that is related to the outbreaks
of riots but rather weak political institutions, economic shocks and civil
conflict. In doing so it highlights a series of other challenges facing future
cities.
● Caprotti, F. (2014) ‘Eco-urbanism and the eco-city, or, denying the right to the
city?’, Antipode, 46(5): 1285–1303
A highly critical intervention that punctures the utopian myth-making
surrounding the development of eco-cities as technological solutions to
ecological crises. The article highlights the roles of eco-cities in perpetuating
inequalities in the transition to low-carbon, green capitalism. It examines the
discourses of crisis and solution upon which eco-city development is often
advanced and the fates of the low-paid migrant workers upon whose labour these
developments are often built but who remain largely hidden from view and little
considered in academic accounts.
● Castán Broto, V. and Bulkeley, H. (2013) ‘A survey of urban climate change
experiments in 100 cities’, Global Environmental Change, 23(1): 92–102
The majority of research literature on urban climate change responses had been
based around single case studies, the majority of which were located in the cities
of the Global North. Recognizing the limitations of this literature, this is an
attempt to extend our knowledge of what experiments are occurring across a
significantly wider, global terrain. It is a key reference. While its discussion of
urban climate change experiments inevitably lacks the depth of individual case
study approaches, it offers an unprecedented breadth in its perspective.
● Kourtit, K., Nijkamp, P. and Reid, N. (2014) ‘The new urban world: challenges
and policy’, Applied Geography, 49: 1–3
The introductory paper for a special collection of research articles from the
journal Applied Geography that address the ways in which cities might respond
positively to the future challenges they face. While this introductory paper
provides an excellent concise overview, the papers that follow delve into the
specifics. It is worth reading all of the papers in this collection which include
discussions of urban connectivity, liveability, the inertia inherent in cities,
entrepreneurialism, new data, and infrastructure. Brown’s paper above is another
in this special collection.
● Luque-Ayala, A. and Marvin, S. (2015) ‘Developing a critical understanding
of smart urbanism?’, Urban Studies, 52(12): 2105–2116
Smart urbanism (technologically and digitally driven) has been hailed as a
panacea to many of the ills of the contemporary and future city. This short
review reveals that we actually know very little about it from a critical
perspective. The literature to date has been focused predominantly on
technological issues rather than social questions. The paper outlines a research
agenda to address this deficit which is interdisciplinary and comparative in its
approach.
328 • Issues
Websites
Arts and Crafts: An international design movement that originated in England and
flourished between 1880 and 1910, continuing its influence up to the 1930s. The
movement advocated truth to materials and traditional craftsmanship using simple forms
and often medieval, romantic or folk styles of decoration. It also proposed economic
and social reform and has been seen as essentially anti-industrial.
Breakthrough street: A street constructed to link two or more existing streets.
These were particularly common in the early nineteenth century: the era of transport
innovations. A breakthrough street may involve the demolition of building fabric and
considerable transformation of plot layouts.
Burgage cycle: The progressive filling-in with buildings of the back lands of burgage
plots, culminating in the clearing of buildings and a period of urban fallow, or plot
vacancy, prior to the initiation of a redevelopment cycle. See burgage plot below.
Burgage plot: An urban strip-plot held by a burgess in an English medieval town or city
and charged with a fixed annual rent. A unit of land ownership.
Carceral: from the Latin word carcer meaning prison, used in the case of the city to
imply a city where physical boundaries are used to control urban space. In these
‘public’ spaces, gatherings of strangers to the area are discouraged, and barricades of
various forms can prevent people from entering or passing through.
Central place theory: Central place theory seeks to explain the number, size and
location of human settlements in an urban system. It assumes that marketing is the
dominant function in the urban system and seeks to explain how services are distributed
and why there are distinct patterns in this distribution; organized by hexagons to
eliminate unserved or overlapping market areas.
Cognition: The processes by which the brain analyses environmental information it
receives through the senses.
Collective consumption: The provision and management of public goods and services
such as municipal housing, health and education services that are distributed through
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Index
Locators in italic refer to figures and those automobiles 274–276, 276, 283–284,
in bold to tables. 285–286, 291–293
‘aviopolis’ 278
Accra, globalization case study 70–71
adaptation, climate change 311, 312 Baltimore, US, regeneration 88
Adu Dhabi, Masdar City as eco-city Barcelona’s Museum of Contemporary
317–318, 319 Art (MACBA) and 116–117, 117,
Africa: migration to urban areas 7; 172–176, 175
transport 279; see also individually Barnsbury, London, gentrification 257–258
named countries behavioural approaches: experiencing
agents of urban change 31 cities 236–238; residential mobility
air transport 278–282 259–261; social norms 240–247, 242;
allotments, everyday life 231–233 social science 19; transport 290–291
alternative capitalism, creative industries Benjamin, Walter 243
79–80 Berry, Brian 18, 21
America see Canada; North America; bias, property markets 264–265
United States bicycling 292–293
Amin, Ash 165–166 bid-rents 56
architecture 183–184, 204; conservation Birmingham, UK: fringe belt case study
137–142; critiquing urban visions 40–41; tourism 75, 88–89
135–136; development of 184–188; of Bluffton, South Carolina case study
fear 202–204; gender 194–197; global 219–220
197–202; as a profession 189–190; bodies, experiencing cities 236–240
The Radiant City 131–135, 132; Bondi, Liz 197
spectacularism 45, 46, 197–202; Boston, US, residential patterns 253
sustainability 311; and urban geography Bourdieu, Pierre 200
190–194; see also planning branding cities 222–224
artistic representations of the city 214–216, Brasilia, Brazil, planning 133, 134
216 breakthrough streets 42–43
arts and crafts movement, planning 128 Brundtland World Commission 304
attributional research 65–68 Budd, L. 321
Auckland, New Zealand, residential built environment see architecture; urban
mobility 261 forms
Index • 375
Bulkeley, Harriet 312–313, 324 22–23, 56–60, 71; urban politics 98–103,
burgage cycles 30, 35 105, 111; and wider contexts 21–22; see
Burgess, Jacqueline 212 also economies of cities; images of the
Burgess’ concentric zone model 19, 37, 38 city; urban forms
Byrne, David 100–101 city centres: central place theory 21, 56,
84–85; urban forms 42–43
California School 45 class: gentrification 256; planning 130–131;
Canada: Montréal branding case study social movements 114–115
223–224; Vancouver’s public library climate change: adaptation/mitigation 311,
case study 193–194 311–312; futures 307–313; transport
capacity building, planning 151–152 275–276, 282–285
capitalism: formal political arena 100–101; clustering: creative industries 78, 82; culture
images of the city 214; regime of 162–163, 168; residential patterns
accumulation 20, 60; structuralist 253–254; urban forms 37–39
approaches 57–59, 58; urban politics Coaffee, Jon and Murakami Wood, D. 202
113–114 coastal cities, new industrial zones 76–77
Caprotti, F. 315, 319–320 Cochrane, A. 145, 150, 151
carbon emissions, transport 275–276, cognition 236–238
282–285; see also climate change collective consumption 104, 113–114
carceral architecture 46, 47 colonial cities: architecture 186; urban forms
Carley, Michael 150 36–37, 43–44
cars 274–276, 276, 283–284, 285–286, commercialisation: promoting cities
291–293 218–224; visitor economy 87–90
Carter, Harold 28 communities: planning 144; urban politics
Castán Broto, Vanesa 312–313, 324
106–107, 112–113
Castells, Manuel: collective consumption
competitive advantage: airports 280; cultural
104; informational cities 68–69; urban
industries 78; marketing cities 218–224;
politics 113–114, 115
retailing 85
central place theory 21, 56, 84–85
concentric zone model 19, 37, 38
de Certeau, Michel 243
conferences, event tourism 78–79
Challenge Fund Programme 146
connectivity: creative industries 78–79;
Chen, X. 306
globalization 63–65; megacities 8–10;
Chicago, US, heritage case study 171
post-modern cities 46; sustainability 306;
Chicago School: industrial cities 37; internal
transport 276–282; world cities 65–69
geographies of cities 18–20; pre-
industrial urban forms 34; residential conservation, urban planning 137–142,
patterns 253–254 157–158, 169–171
China: migration to urban areas 7; traditional constraints, time-geography 243–247
cities 36; transport 275–276, 278, 280, consumerism: collective consumption 104,
281 113–114; retailing 85–87, 86; see also
Christaller’s central place theory 21, 56, tourism
84–85 context, urban geography 12
Christiania, Copenhagen 79–80 Conzen, M.R.G. 29–31, 35
Chung, Alexa 161 Copenhagen: creative economy 79–80;
cities: and culture 156–160; globalization 22, transport 292–293
60–71; popular culture 10–11; research corruption 112
context 3–5; structuralist approaches country music 211–212
376 • Index