The SAGE Handbook of New Urban Studies

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INCISBN: 9781412912655

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Edited by John A. (Andrew) Hannigan, Greg Richards
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SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
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Format:
HARDBACK
Pages:
610

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John Hannigan is Professor of Sociology and Associate Chair, Graduate Studies (Sociology) at the University of Toronto, where he teaches courses in cultural policy, urban political economy and environmental sociology. He has written four books: Environmental Sociology (1995, 2006, 2014), Fantasy City: Pleasure and Profit in the Postmodern City (1998), Disasters Without Borders: The International Politics of Natural Disasters (2012), and The Geopolitics of Deep Oceans (2015). Fantasy City was nominated for the 1999-2000 John Porter Award of the Canadian Sociology and Anthropology Association. Environmental Sociology has been translated into Chinese, Japanese, Korean and Portuguese. In his most recent book, The Geopolitics of Deep Oceans, Dr. Hannigan argues that our understanding of the deep depends on whether we see it primarily as a resource cornucopia, a global political chessboard, a shared commons, or a unique and threatened ecology. He is currently co-editing the SAGE Handbook of New Urban Studies (with Greg Richards) due to be published in 2017. Greg Richards is Professor of Placemaking and Events at NHTV Breda and Professor of Leisure Studies at Tilburg University. In recent years his research has focussed on what attracts people to cities and how they help to make urban places. He has worked extensively on tourism and the cultural and creative industries in cities such as Barcelona (ES), London, Newcastle, Manchester and Edinburgh (UK) Amsterdam, Rotterdam and Den Bosch (NL), Sibiu (RO), Amman (Jordan) and Macau (China). His recent publications include 'Eventful Cities' and 'Reinventing the Local in Tourism: Producing, Consuming and Negotiating Place'.

Chapter 1: Introduction - John Hannigan and Greg Richards SECTION 1: THE GLOBALIZED CITY Chapter 2: Locating Transnational Urban Connections Beyond World City Networks - Tim Bunnell Chapter 3: Frontier financial cities - Adam D. Dixon Chapter 4: Eventful cities: Strategies for event-based urban development - Greg Richards SECTION 2: URBAN ENTREPRENEURIALISM, BRANDING, GOVERNANCE Chapter 5: Twin cities: territorial and relational urbanism - Mark Jayne, Phil Hubbard and David Bell Chapter 6: Idealizing the European City in a Neoliberal Age - Philip Lawton Chapter 7: City branding as a governance strategy - Jasper Eshuis and Erik-Hans Klijn SECTION 3: MARGINALITY, RISK AND RESILIENCE Chapter 8: Territorial Stigmatization: Symbolic Defamation and the Contemporary Metropolis - Tom Slater Chapter 9: The liminal city: Gender, mobility and governance in a twenty-first century African city - Caroline Wanjiku Kihato Chapter 10: Constructing and contesting resilience in post-disaster urban communities - Kevin Fox Gotham and Bradford Powers SECTION 4: SUBURBS AND SUBURBANIZATION: STRATIFICATION, SPRAWL, SUSTAINABILITY Chapter 11: Emerging geographies of suburban disadvantage - Bill Randolph Chapter 12: The climate change challenge and the urban environment: collective action issues in the suburbs - Ian Smith Chapter 13: Social construction of smart growth policies and strategies - John Hannigan SECTION 5: DISTINCTIVE AND VISIBLE CITIES Chapter 14: The global art city - Can Seng Ooi Chapter 15: Lights, city, action... - Tim Edensor Chapter 16: On urban (in)visibilities - Ricardo Campos Chapter 17: Events as creative district generators? Beyond the conventional wisdom - Pier Luigi Sacco Chapter 18: Mega Events in emerging nations and the festivalisation of the urban backstage. The cases of Brazil and South Africa - Christoph Haferburg and Malte Steinbrink SECTION 6: CREATIVE CITIES Chapter 19: Urban social movements and the night: Struggling for the 'right to the creative (party) city' in Geneva - Robert Hollands, Marie-Avril Berthet, Eva Nada and Virginia Bjertnes Chapter 20: Creative Cities - an international perspective - Graeme Evans Chapter 21: Moving to Meet and Make: Rethinking Creativity in Making Things Take Place - Jorgen Ole Baerenholdt Chapter 22: Creative clusters in urban spaces - Lenia Marques Chapter 23: Rebalancing the Creative City after 20 years of debate - Nienke van Boom SECTION 7: URBANIZATION, URBANITY AND URBAN LIFESTYLES Chapter 24: Urbanization and Housing in Africa - Paul Collier and Anthony J. Venables Chapter 25: Differentiated residential orientations of class fractions - Willem Boterman and Sako Musterd Chapter 26: Some scenes of urban life - Dan Silver Chapter 27: Urban foodscapes: Repositioning food in urban studies through the case of Vancouver's Downtown Eastside - Christiana Miewald, Daniela Aiello and Eugene McCann SECTION 8: NEW DIRECTIONS IN URBAN THEORY Chapter 28: African ideas of the urban - Garth Myers Chapter 29: New Frontiers in researching Chinese cities - Shenjing He and Junxi Qian Chapter 30: Informal settlement and assemblage theory - Kim Dovey SECTION 9: URBAN FUTURES Chapter 31: The changing urban future: The views of the media and academics - Clovis Ultramari and Fabio Duarte Chapter 32: Olympic Futures and Urban Imaginings: from Albertopolis to Olympicopolis - John Gold and Margaret Gold Chapter 33: Experiencing the Hybrid City: The role of digital technology in public urban places - Anna Luusua, Johanna Ylipulli, Hannu Kukka and Timo Ojala Chapter 34: The New Urban World: Challenges and Policy with Respect to Shrinking Cities - Sujata Shetty and Neil Reid

Urban studies is currently in a state of high flux marked by many different and competing claims. This book is an extraordinarily successful and comprehensive attempt to map out the complex conceptual terrain of urban theory today and to clarify the multiple and conflicting terms of debate. -- Allen J. Scott The Sage Handbook of New Urban Studies is an essential primer for all students of urban studies. In the fast-moving field of both city growth and change, as well as the theoretical interpretations of it, this comprehensive collection provides a lively survey and a vital 'health check'. -- Andy C. Pratt This is a follow-up to the 2001 Handbook of Urban Studies, and shows the increasingly multidisciplinary nature of scholarship that falls under the urban studies label. The editors explain in the introduction that they deliberately avoided a linear approach to editing this collection. So the original papers collected here are about anything and everything related to urban studies, including different theories, topics, and of course places. The chapters in this handbook take readers through all of the current issues in thinking about the city. From this overview, the literature appears to be increasingly decentralized and increasingly interested in low and middle-income nations. -- Christine Ro

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