Reframing urban development politics: Transcalarity in sovereign, developmental and private circuits

IF 4.2 1区 经济学 Q1 ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES
Jennifer Robinson, Philip Harrison, Sylvia Croese, Rosina Sheburah Essien, Wilbard Kombe, Matthew Lane, Evance Mwathunga, George Owusu, Yan Yang
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Abstract

This paper develops the idea of transcalarity to reframe analyses of urban development politics. Our analysis starts from African contexts but is relevant to, and in conversation with, experiences on other continents. Accounts of the politics of urban development have rarely benefitted from the experiences of African urban settings. Characterised by relatively weakly resourced municipalities, informality of the urban setting and of the state, and highly transnationalised forms of governance, African experiences may seem to stand out as profoundly different from those which have informed dominant theorisations of urban development politics. And yet, it is across the African continent that a substantial portion of the world’s new, future urban areas are being made, providing strong grounds for theorising urban development politics starting from the diversity of experiences across the continent. Evidence from current research and long-term observations in three African urban contexts (Lilongwe, Accra and Dar es Salaam) indicate that inherited conceptualisations vastly overestimate the resources and agency of municipal government in many urban contexts and omit the enhanced institutional interests of national actors in urban development. Also, the range of international actors considered has been analytically restricted or mischaracterised, as global sovereign and developmental actors play a powerful role while significant private sector interests may not be very international. More generally, ‘circulating’ processes and actors might not be ‘external’ as, especially in relation to developmental and sovereign circuits, these are often embedded in and contribute to shaping emergent transcalar territorial networks co-ordinating investment in different contexts.
重构城市发展政治:主权、发展和私人回路的跨尺度性
本文提出了跨量性的概念,以重构城市发展政治的分析。我们的分析从非洲的背景出发,但与其他大陆的经验相关,并与之交流。关于城市发展政治的论述很少能从非洲城市环境的经验中获益。非洲的特点是资源相对较弱的市政当局,城市环境和国家的非正式性,以及高度跨国的治理形式,非洲的经验似乎与那些已经为城市发展政治的主导理论提供信息的经验截然不同。然而,在整个非洲大陆,世界上很大一部分新的、未来的城市地区正在建设中,这为从整个非洲大陆的多样性经验出发,将城市发展政治理论化提供了强有力的基础。来自三个非洲城市背景(利隆圭、阿克拉和达累斯萨拉姆)的当前研究和长期观察的证据表明,在许多城市背景下,继承的概念大大高估了市政府的资源和机构,忽略了国家行动者在城市发展中的机构利益。此外,所考虑的国际行为者的范围在分析上受到限制或定性错误,因为全球主权和发展行为者发挥着强大的作用,而重要的私营部门利益可能不是非常国际化。更一般地说,“循环”过程和行为者可能不是“外部”的,特别是在发展和主权回路方面,它们通常嵌入并有助于形成在不同背景下协调投资的新兴跨标量领土网络。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Urban Studies
Urban Studies Multiple-
CiteScore
10.50
自引率
8.50%
发文量
150
期刊介绍: Urban Studies was first published in 1964 to provide an international forum of social and economic contributions to the fields of urban and regional planning. Since then, the Journal has expanded to encompass the increasing range of disciplines and approaches that have been brought to bear on urban and regional problems. Contents include original articles, notes and comments, and a comprehensive book review section. Regular contributions are drawn from the fields of economics, planning, political science, statistics, geography, sociology, population studies and public administration.
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