Policy Experiments in Declining Cities: Part II
Type: Virtual Paper
Day: 2/27/2022
Start Time: 5:20 PM
End Time: 6:40 PM
Theme: Geographies of Access: Inclusion and Pathways
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Organizer(s):
Lisa Berglund
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Chairs(s):
Lisa Berglund, Dalhousie University
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Description:
A body of literature on ‘shrinking cities’ has framed municipalities experiencing population decline and structural crisis as being in need of new planning, governance and finance tools so that they may once again realize their market potential. These perspectives are linked to what Wacquant et al. (2014) have termed a ‘territorial stigmatization’ of declining cities and communities that house increasingly concentrated amounts of racialized poverty; such places thus often become sitting ducks for technocratic experiments to resolve social and economic problems under austerity. This panel will explore the ways that narratives of exceptionalism in declining cities like Detroit, Flint, Buffalo and St. Louis have driven the demand for policy experimentation in various realms. We will focus on policies, development strategies, management schemes, and financing that treat declining cities as places of desperation where extreme examples of austerity governance are piloted. Following Kirkpatrick and Smith (2015) we will explore the significance of exceptionalizing so-called shrinking cities, as their “anomaly serves to camouflage the fact that the city may well represent the leading political edge and/or logical endpoint of advanced (post-crisis) neoliberal austerity”. As such, this panel will also consider the ways in which the results of such policy experiments are exported to other locales, both domestically and internationally
Presentation(s), if applicable
Maria Gunko, ; “Controlled shrinkage”: an impossible to replicate local experiment within the Russian federal agenda for shrinking cities |
Fiona Allon, ; Turning Asparagus Fields into Subdivisions: Stockton, unpayable debts, and the myth of “free money” |
Ana Cukovic, ; Framing Migration as Urban Growth in Detroit: the Role of Philanthropy |
Mark Bjelland, Calvin University; Environmental Justice Versus Market Efficiency: the Spatial Distribution of Public Funding for Brownfield Site Cleanups in Michigan |
Non-Presenting Participants Agenda
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Policy Experiments in Declining Cities: Part II
Description
Virtual Paper
Contact the Primary Organizer
Lisa Berglund - lisa.berglund@dal.ca