走向种姓与城市的政治生态

IF 4.6 3区 经济学 Q1 URBAN STUDIES
Malini Ranganathan
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引用次数: 7

摘要

在这篇文章中,我反思了种姓及其相关的污染和纯洁概念在制造严重不公平、环境不公正和分裂的印度城市中未被认识到的作用。Graham和Marvin的《破碎的城市主义》出版于2001年,探讨了全球南方城市全球化后基础设施网络的碎片化和不平等性质。因此,全球化并不是不平等的主要原因。然而,与阶级、宗教和性别交叉的种姓类别,在批判性城市研究和城市政治生态学中仍然没有占据中心地位。根据对班加罗尔(印度南部)的长期研究,我概述了城市政治生态学研究议程中相互加强的轴线,即对城市财产、基础设施和劳工制度中的种姓权力的质疑。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Towards a Political Ecology of Caste and the City
ABSTRACT In this contribution, I reflect on the under-recognized role of caste and its allied notions of pollution and purity in the making of deeply inequitable, environmentally unjust, and splintered Indian cities. Published in 2001, Graham and Marvin’s Splintering Urbanism addressed the fragmented and unequal nature of infrastructure networks in the wake of globalization in cities of the Global South. Of particular interest to scholars since then has been to trouble the historicity of the book’s central thesis, demonstrating that postcolonial cities have always been splintered along the lines of race, class, and ethnicity via unequal infrastructural networks and segregated housing; as such, globalization is not the primary cause of inequality. Yet, the category of caste, intersecting with class, religion, and gender, still has not featured centrally in critical urban studies and urban political ecology. Drawing on long-term research on Bangalore (southern India), I sketch mutually reinforcing axes of a research agenda in urban political ecology, namely the interrogation of caste power in urban property, infrastructure, and labor regimes.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
8.50
自引率
4.20%
发文量
42
期刊介绍: The Journal of Urban Technology publishes articles that review and analyze developments in urban technologies as well as articles that study the history and the political, economic, environmental, social, esthetic, and ethical effects of those technologies. The goal of the journal is, through education and discussion, to maximize the positive and minimize the adverse effects of technology on cities. The journal"s mission is to open a conversation between specialists and non-specialists (or among practitioners of different specialities) and is designed for both scholars and a general audience whose businesses, occupations, professions, or studies require that they become aware of the effects of new technologies on urban environments.
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