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CfP RGS-IBG 2023: Comparative moments in urban research: Building methodology from now and here

08 Wednesday Feb 2023

Posted by Yimin in Academic, Events

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conference, Geography, methodology, RGS-IBG, urban

Below is a call for papers for the RGS-IBG Annual Conference in London, August 29th – September 1st, 2023. We look forward to hearing from you if you’d be interested in engaging with discussions on this topic!

Comparative moments in urban research: Building methodology from now and here

Organisers: Julie Ren (University of Zurich) and Yimin Zhao (Renmin University of China / University of Zurich)

Ongoing debates on comparative urbanism have continued to grapple with the multiplicity of both experiences and conceptualisations (Robinson, 2022; Roy, 2016; cf. Rudolph and Storper, 2023). For the sake of theoretical development, there is a necessity to move beyond “case-study singularity” (Peck, 2015) or reductive exceptionalism (Ren, 2021). Recognising the individual character of the urban while also embracing a dialogical theory-culture, requires better specifying the now and here when we are engaging with the project of “thinking cities through elsewhere.” Instead of seeing our field sites as spatial containers for social research, we explore the possibility of taking these sites as “moments” that are shaped by flows, processes, things and encounters at global, local and bodily levels (Appadurai, 1988; Gupta and Ferguson, 1997; Haraway, 1991; Massey, 2005; Smith and Katz, 1993; Zhao, 2017). To what extent can such moments reshape the way scholars approach comparative urban research?

For instance, research conducted in languages different than the language of knowledge production evoke questions about the nature of flows and encounters as it pertains to translation. The stability of language connected to place offers a vantage point from which to ask whether research is translatable to each other (Apter 2013; Jazeel 2019; Zhao 2020). Whether or not this is immediately the case, is it possible to pave the way for such translations, to encourage linguistic hospitalities or to learn from translation “failures” to better frame a now and here that would be open to dialogue? Indeed, more explicitly considering the significance of positionality, partial perspectives and situated knowledges may prove indispensable for analyses of both now and here and elsewhere, at the heart of a more global urban studies.

Following Jenny Robinson’s (2022: 6) call for “building methodology from the spatiality of the urban,” we invite theoretical, methodological and empirical reflections on comparative moments in urban research. We seek papers that offer approaches researching different places, especially approaches that work with the translation of “theory built elsewhere” (Bhan, 2019: 641) and that participate in generative naming processes of “other” urban spatialities (Zhao 2020). How do researchers grapple with perennial issues of context, history and language anew? How shall we further interrogate the grounds for site selection as it pertains to both places and the revisability of concepts? How might these justifications in turn shed new light on the issue of translatability and commensurability?

If you are interested to engage with these questions, please send abstracts (max. 250 words) with name, email, affiliation by 1 March 2023 to both Julie Ren (julie.ren@uzh.ch) and Yimin Zhao (yimin.zhao@geo.uzh.ch).

References

Appadurai, A. (1988). “Introduction: Place and Voice in Anthropological Theory.” Cultural Anthropology 3(1): 16–20.

Apter, E. (2013). Against World Literature: On the Politics of Untranslatability. London and New York: Verso.

Bhan, G. (2019). Notes on a Southern urban practice. Environment and Urbanization, 31(2), 639-654.

Gupta, A., & Ferguson, J. (Eds.). (1997). Anthropological locations: Boundaries and grounds of a field science. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press.

Haraway, D. (1991). Situated Knowledges: the science question in feminism and the privilege of partial perspective. In Simians, cyborgs, and women: The reinvention of nature (pp. 183-201). New York: Routledge.

Jazeel, T. (2019). Singularity. A manifesto for incomparable geographies. Singapore Journal of Tropical Geography, 40(1), 5-21.

Massey, D. (2005). For space. London: Sage.

Peck, J. (2015). Cities beyond compare? Regional Studies, 49(1), 160-182.

Randolph, G. F., & Storper, M. (2023). Is urbanisation in the Global South fundamentally different? Comparative global urban analysis for the 21st century. Urban Studies, 60(1), 3–25.

Ren, J. (2021). Exceptionalism and theorizing spatial inequality: Segregation research on cities in China. Journal of Urban Affairs, 1-13.

Robinson, J. (2022). Comparative urbanism: Tactics for global urban studies. Oxford: Wiley.

Roy, A. (2016). Who’s afraid of postcolonial theory? International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, 40(1), 200-209.

Smith, N., & Katz, C. (1993). Grounding metaphor: Towards a spatialized politics. In M. Keith & S. Pile (Eds.), Place and the politics of identity (pp. 66-81). London and New York: Routledge.

Zhao, Y. (2017). Space as method: Field sites and encounters in Beijing’s green belts. City, 21(2), 190-206.

Zhao, Y. (2020). Jiehebu or suburb? Towards a translational turn in urban studies. Cambridge Journal of Regions, Economy and Society, 13(3), 527-542.

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AAG 2017: China as Methods

25 Friday Nov 2016

Posted by Yimin in Academic, Events

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conference, Geography, space

Paper sessions in 2017 Annual Meeting of the American Association of Geographers (Boston, MA, 5-9 April 2017)

 

Organisers

Yimin Zhao (The London School of Economics and Political Science); Yueming Zhang (University of Birmingham); Yang Yang (University of Colorado – Boulder)

Sponsorship

Asian Geography Specialty Group, China Specialty Group, Cultural Geography Specialty Group, Urban Geography Specialty Group

Session introduction

In 1989, Mizoguchi Yuzo published China as Method and called for reversing Eurocentric theory and epistemological framework (Mizoguchi 2011 [1989]). For Mizoguchi, the end of conceiving China “should be the ‘study of China’ that transcends China” (cf. Chen 2010, 252). In other words, China is a method when understanding the world is the purpose – and in this multiplied “world”, as Chen Kuan-Hsing reminds us (ibid., 253), both China and Europe are elements. It is here that we can see some affinities between Mizoguchi’s position and recently rising comparative urbanism to study the world of cities (Robinson, 2006).

Mizoguchi’s proposition has methodological significances for it helps replace the vertical principle of history (which is teleological and dominated by Eurocentric theories) by a horizontal view of space-time where different elements are juxtaposed. Seeing in this way, claims of universalisation should be questioned, and investigations on the dynamic space-time are urgently needed. Some endeavours can be witnessed in the literature, such as Wang Hui’s (2011) discussion on “trans-systemic society” and “trans-societal system,” yet more efforts are required to rethink how and to what extent China can be a method to understand the world. This critical reflection on seeing China as a methodology approach can be potentially productive in geographical inquiries on/in/related to China.

In this session, we aim at continuing the proposition put forward by Mizoguchi almost three decades ago and focus on how the “study of China” may yield methodological and/or epistemological implications for not only studying China but also geographical inquiries in general. “China” is more than a field site, especially in the contemporary world where “the spectre of global China” (Lee, 2014) can be seen everywhere. Hence, we invite theoretical and empirical contributions that concern methodological and epistemological implications of the “study of China,” with “China” being broadly defined as the starting point and hopefully transcended at the end.

Potential topics include, but are not limited to:

  • What do China and the study of China mean in nowadays geographical research?
  • How can China be studied more than a subject, but as an entity, relation, process, nexus…?
  • What and how are theories used in and/or built from the study of China? What are the theoretical potentials and challenges in the study of China?
  • What kind of implications can be drawn from studies in/on China for broader concerns in fieldwork methods?
  • Where and how to locate China in comparative studies?

 

Paper Session I

Chair: Yueming Zhang (University of Birmingham, UK)

Discussant: Jennifer Robinson (University College London, UK)

(Extra)ordinary Beijing: On urban ontologies and artistic practice

  • Julie Ren (London School of Economics and Political Science, UK)
  • Murray Mckenzie (University College London, UK)

Space as a method: Field sites and encounters in Beijing’s green belts

  • Yimin Zhao (London School of Economics and Political Science, UK)

Provincialising the West, de-parochialising China: Some reflections from China’s urban centres and ethnic peripheries

  • Junxi Qian (University of Hong Kong, HK)

China in the African imaginary and the problems of solidarity

  • Xiaoran Hu (Queen Mary University of London, UK)

Paper Session II

Chair: Yimin Zhao (London School of Economics and Political Science, UK)

Discussant: Max D. Woodworth (Ohio State University, US)

From Xinjiang to Addis Ababa: Encountering China at its “periphery” and “frontier”

  • Ding Fei (University of Minnesota, US)

Displaying connections between Chinese and global Muslim communities through fashions in transnational urban space in the Hui Quarter in Xi’an

  • Yang Yang (University of Colorado – Boulder, US)

Of “other” people: The exotic landscape of Chinese diasporas (and its rejection) in Boston

  • Jing Luo (Tsinghua University, China)

Not “China as Methods” but “Chinese dialectics” as a methodology: The tongbian approach

  • Wing-shing Tang (Hong Kong Baptist University, HK)

 

References

Chen, K.-H., 2010. Asia as Method: Toward Deimperialization. Durham, NC: Duke University Press.

Lee, C. K., 2014. The spectre of global China. New Left Review (89):29-65.

Mizoguchi, Y., 2011 [1989]. China as Method [Zuowei fangfade zhongguo]. Beijing: SDX Joint Publishing Company.

Robinson, J., 2006. Ordinary cities: Between modernity and development. Routledge.

Wang, H., 2011. Trans-systemic Society and Regional Perspective in Chinese Studies. boundary 2, 38(1):165-201.

RGS-IBG AC 2016: Sessions to go

30 Tuesday Aug 2016

Posted by Yimin in Academic, Events

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conference, Geography, London

 

This year’s RGS-IBG Annual Conference is going to start tomorrow in London. Below is a list of sessions that I want to hear more details during this three-day event. Welcome to join us if you are in London and are interested in any session listed below.

And by the way, I will give a short presentation in paper session No.339 (Friday 02 September 2016, 14:40 – 16:20). The abstract can be found here. I look forward to seeing you then and hearing any comment you would like to give.

 

Chair’s plenary lectures

The Ghost in the Nexus: Global Poverty and the Dilemmas of Development

Ananya Roy (University of California Los Angeles, USA)

Thursday 1 September 2016, 13.10, RGS-IBG Ondaatje Theatre

In this talk, I situate “nexus thinking” in the present conjuncture of sustainable development and in the long history of development as a global project. In doing so, I pay attention to the disciplines and professions that are being mobilized to solve urgent human problems, specifically that of poverty. Framed as scientific solutions towards a better world, such frameworks of action are also replete with distinctive aspirations and affects. Foregrounding the figure of the millennial – college students and young professionals enrolled in the global university and enlisted in the work of poverty action – I examine the potentialities and limits of the will to make poverty history, and thereby of nexus thinking.

Discussants: Jennifer Robinson (University College London, UK); Parvati Raghuram (The Open University, UK)

 

Plenaries, panels, workshops

Wednesday (31 August)

  • Area are sponsoring a panel on Ethics in/of geographical research, chaired by Peter Kraftl. Panellists: Sarah Marie Hall (The University of Manchester, UK); James Cheshire (University College London, UK); Anson Mackay (University College London, UK); Stephen Tooth (Aberystwyth University, UK); Jen Dickinson (University of Leicester, UK); and Andy Nobes (INASP/Author Aid, UK). Wednesday, 14.40; room: RGS-IBG Education Centre. This will be followed by a tea and cake reception.
  • The Antipode lecture, Recomposing Urban Collective Life: On Operations and the Inoperable, will be given by AbdouMaliq Simone (Max Planck Institute for the Study of Religious and Ethnic Diversity, Göttingen, Germany). Wednesday, 16.50; room: RGS-IBG Ondaatje Theatre. This will be followed by a reception.

Thursday (1 September)

  • Author meets critics: Fiona McConnell – Rehearsing the State: The Political Practices of the Tibetan Government-in-Exile (RGS-IBG Book Series, Wiley-Blackwell). Thursday, 09.00; room: RGS-IBG Drayson Room.
  • The Progress in Human Geography lecture, Trust – in Geography, will be given by Charles Withers (The University of Edinburgh, UK). Thursday, 11.10; room: RGS-IBG Ondaatje Theatre.
  • Colleagues of John Urry (1946-2016) have organised a Remembrance and Book Launch in celebration of his work. Thursday, 16.50; room: RGS-IBG Council Room. This will be followed by a reception.
  • Authors meet critics: Planetary gentrification by Loretta Lees , Hyun Bang Shin and Ernesto López-Morales (Polity). Thursday, 16.50; room: RGS-IBG Ondaatje Theatre. To be followed by a drinks reception, sponsored by Urban Studies.

Friday (2 September)

  • The Social and Cultural Geography lecture, Beyond policing the migrant crisis: Geographical contributions, will be given by Parvati Raghuram (The Open University, UK). Friday, 09.00.
  • Colleagues and former students of Doreen Massey have organised a celebration of her life and work, including screening a montage made up from contributions from people who met her and worked with her in all spheres of her life. Friday, 16.50; room: RGS-IBG Ondaatje Theatre.

 

Paper sessions on Wednesday (31 August)

No.16 The London nexus – metropolitan elites in the 21st century, new perspectives on Britain’s south-eastern skew

Timetable: Wednesday 31 August 2016, Session 1 (09:00 – 10:40) || Skempton Building, Lecture Theatre 164, Imperial College London || Abstracts: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2016/16

No.24 Geography and Decolonization, c.1945-c.1980 (1)

Timetable: Wednesday 31 August 2016, Session 1 (09:00 – 10:40) || Room 5, Skempton Building, Imperial College London || Abstracts: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2016/24

No.29 Post-phenomenological Geographies: methods and styles of researching and writing the human (1): Subjects

Timetable: Wednesday 31 August 2016, Session 1 (09:00 – 10:40) || Royal School of Mines, Room G.05 || Abstracts: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2016/29

No.56 Geography and Decolonization, c.1945-c.1980 (2)

Timetable: Wednesday 31 August 2016, Session 2 (11:10 – 12:50) || Room 5, Sherfield Building || Abstracts: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2016/56

No.61 State, Territory, Urbanism: Exploring the Nexus Between Government and Infrastructure (2)

Timetable: Wednesday 31 August 2016, Session 2 (11:10 – 12:50) || Room 10, Sherfield Building || Abstracts: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2016/61

No.69 Affect and the Geographies of Power

Timetable: Wednesday 31 August 2016, Session 3 (14:40 – 16:20) || RGS-IBG Ondaatje Theatre || Panel discussion: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2016/69

No.84 Nexus Thinking in Gentrification Studies (2)

Timetable: Wednesday 31 August 2016, Session 3 (14:40 – 16:20) || Skempton Building, Lecture Theatre 164 || Abstracts: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2016/84

No.98 Forging politicised solidarities in, against and beyond the European crisis (1): Articulating local solidarities

Timetable: Wednesday 31 August 2016, Session 3 (14:40 – 16:20) || Royal School of Mines, Room G.05 || Abstracts: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2016/98

No.102 Set in motion: walking the history of the Royal Geographical Society (with IBG) c.1830-2016

Timetable: Wednesday 31 August 2016, Session 3 (14:40 – 16:20) || Offsite (field tour): http://conference.rgs.org/AC2016/102

No.118 Nexus Thinking in Gentrification Studies (3)

Timetable: Wednesday 31 August 2016, Session 4 (16:50 – 18:30) || Skempton Building, Lecture Theatre 164 || Abstracts: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2016/118

No.128 Operations of capital: Studying the nexus of land, housing, and finance across the North-South divide

Timetable: Wednesday 31 August 2016, Session 4 (16:50 – 18:30) || Sherfield Building, Room 7 || Abstracts: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2016/128

No.132 Forging politicised solidarities in, against and beyond the European crisis (2): Towards trans-local solidarities

Timetable: Wednesday 31 August 2016, Session 4 (16:50 – 18:30) || Royal School of Mines, Room G.05 || Abstracts: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2016/132

 

Paper sessions on Thursday (1 September)

No.181 Contested urban green spaces in the ‘austerity city’: Re-politicising the environment and commoning public spaces? (1): Funding and Management

Timetable: Thursday 01 September 2016, Session 2 (11:10 – 12:50) || Skempton Building, Room 064b || Abstracts: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2016/181

No.215 Contested urban green spaces in the ‘austerity city’: Re-politicising the environment and commoning public spaces? (2): Planning and Governance

Timetable: Thursday 01 September 2016, Session 3 (14:40 – 16:20) || Skempton Building, Room 064b || Abstracts: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2016/215

No.217 The City-Hinterland Nexus in Global Context: The dynamics of rural-urban connections in different global contexts (1)

Timetable: Thursday 01 September 2016, Session 3 (14:40 – 16:20) || Skempton Building, Lecture Theatre 164 || Abstracts: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2016/217

No.234 Deaf spaces of Victorian London – a walking tour

Timetable: Thursday 01 September 2016, Session 3 (14:40 – 16:20) || Offsite (field tour): http://conference.rgs.org/AC2016/234

 

Paper sessions on Friday (2 September)

No.271 Geographies of Anti-colonialism (1): Theorising Anti-colonialisms

Timetable: Friday 02 September 2016, Session 1 (09:00 – 10:40) || Sir Alexander Fleming Building, Lecture Theatre G34 || Abstracts: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2016/271

No.281 Beyond Borders and Nations: Transnational Geographies from Syria to Europe (1): Transnational Geographies of solidarity and resistance

Timetable: Friday 02 September 2016, Session 1 (09:00 – 10:40) || Skempton Building, Room 165 || Abstracts: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2016/281

No.301 Geographies of Anti-colonialism (2): Histories of Anti-colonialism

Timetable: Friday 02 September 2016, Session 2 (11:10 – 12:50) || Sir Alexander Fleming Building, Lecture Theatre G34 || Abstracts: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2016/301

No.311 Beyond Borders and Nations: Transnational Geographies from Syria to Europe (2): Transnational Geographies of segregation

Timetable: Friday 02 September 2016, Session 2 (11:10 – 12:50) || Skempton Building, Room 165 || Abstracts: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2016/311

No.339 Narrating Displacements: A Radical Way to Rethink Urban Theories and Politics

Timetable: Friday 02 September 2016, Session 3 (14:40 – 16:20) || Skempton Building, Room 163 || Abstracts: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2016/339

No.374 Rethinking Life at the Margins: The Assemblage of Contexts, Subjects and Politics

Timetable: Friday 02 September 2016, Session 4 (16:50 – 18:30) || Sherfield Building, Room 7 || Abstracts: http://conference.rgs.org/AC2016/374

 

Closing drinks reception

Friday 18:45-20:00; RGS-IBG Ondaatje Theatre

 

RGS-IBG AC 2016: Narrating Displacements

06 Wednesday Jul 2016

Posted by Yimin in Academic, Events, London

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conference, displacement, Geography

Narrating Displacements: A Radical Way to Rethink Urban Theories and Politics

RGS-IBG Annual Conference, August 30 to September 2, London, UK

Convenors

Hyun Bang Shin (The London School of Economics and Political Science, UK)
Yimin Zhao (The London School of Economics and Political Science, UK)
Mara Nogueira (The London School of Economics and Political Science, UK)

Session abstract

We have been witnessing the rise of urban expansion, gentrification, mega-events and many other political economic events in urban space; all of them have direct impacts on the daily life of local residents through large- or small-scale displacements. Displacement hence becomes a term that has been widely used for critical urban theories in analysing contemporary urban change, especially in the Anglo-Saxon world. When people use this word in the literature, however, relatively few attentions are paid to mechanisms through which place-based understandings and discourses of displacement are enabling/ bounding the historical-geographical conjuncture of domination and resistance.

Discourses of displacement are diverse geographically; they are also narrated and deployed by different subjects from distinct perspectives in displacement processes. Expressions like “chaiqian” (demolition and relocation), “qianyi” (relocation), “qiangpo qianyi” (forced relocation) are used in China to express actions through which the state institutions and businesses operate. In South Korea, “cheolgeo” (demolition), “gangje cheolgeo” (forced demolition) or “yiju” (relocation) are more frequently utilised by those subject to displacement. Elsewhere in Latin America, for example in Brazil, “despejo” (eviction) “desalojamento forçado” (forced eviction) and “expulsão” (expulsion) are common concepts deployed by those suffering displacement threats and their allies. On the other hand, the actors promoting displacement prefer to deploy milder terms such as “desocupação” (evacuation) or “realocação” (reallocation).

The use of these particular expressions shifts the focus towards the final act of displacement; even though in reality people would experience (the feeling of) displacement long before actual demolition, eviction or relocation. Moreover, discussions about belonging and the sense of place show how displacement may occur even in the absence of such events. In this regard, abrupt changes to space might cause people to feel “out of place” even though they remain in the same location. To narrate the experience of displacement focusing only on the final acts has serious negative implications for formulating effective strategies that allow pre-emptive earlier contestations to resist and counteract displacement pressure. Furthermore, how displacement is actually narrated in a given local context is not trivial, for conceptualising displacement is itself political.

This session invites papers to reflect on narratives and discourses mobilised around displacement in a diverse range of social, political, economic and cultural settings by attending specifically to the tensions emerging from conceptualisation of displacement by different subjects in daily practices. The aim is to collaboratively reveal the role of displacement discourses in constructing the historical-geographical conjuncture of domination/ resistance, and to uncover power relations/ mechanisms and state effects produced within this conjuncture. Suggestive topics include:

  • Place-based understanding (especially outside the Western context) of displacement and its socio-spatial effects;
  • Conceptualising displacement by different subjects;
  • The role of space in enabling or bounding people’s conceptualisation of displacement, or in affecting their reflections on the gaps between different conceptualisations;
  • The state manoeuver and tactics in promoting displacement with legitimised (sometimes hegemonic) ideology;
  • The effects of different narratives in reshaping understandings of displacement and in opening up possibilities for resistances.

Abstracts of presentations – Session 1

Chair: Hyun Bang Shin
Time: Friday 02 September 2016, 14:40 - 16:20
Venue: TBC

Antagonistic Space and Subjects in Beijing’s Greenbelt

Yimin Zhao (The London School of Economics and Political Science, UK)

In the mainstream literature of contentious politics, space is frequently assumed as a container or a bounded entity. This view has been gradually altered by political geographers, who attend more to the constitutive role of space in understanding socio-political changes. Yet what has been under-examined in the literature is how and to what extent individuals become both spatial objects and political subjects simultaneously in the rise and fall of social movements. This research, drawing on the observation of contingent construction (and decaying) of collective actions in Beijing’s Greenbelt, aims to demonstrate that space and subjects of resistances are mutually constitutive of each other. The paper will illustrate that this mutual constitution needs to be identified by focusing on residues of the hegemonic logic underlying the rise of spatial antagonism. In Beijing’s Greenbelt, the local state’s urbanisation project not only transforms the territorial structure of the rural-urban continuum and the political economy within this structure but also shapes the way villagers view their land, houses and (property) rights. Following transformations of their lifeworld, villagers’ bodies and subjectivities are remade to the extent that their consciousness, identities and discourses are all affected and redefined by the local state’s hegemonic logic. For example, money, rather than the sense of place, becomes the predominant evaluation principle in the displacement process, deployed by both local state and villagers themselves. These impacts altogether make their resistances to displacement possible, but at the same time make these actions contingent and render difficult, if not impossible, the call for wider and stronger resistance alliances for “the right to the city”.

Disciplining Street Life in Hong Kong: Narratives of Displacement and Urban Resistance

Maurizio Marinelli (University of Sussex, UK)

This paper investigates the mega-project of transforming the physical and socio-economic structures of retailing and dwelling in colonial-global Hong Kong. The selected focus is on the progressive annihilation of street markets to create space for ultra-modern, luxury high-rise buildings. Street markets play a crucial role in the policies of urban regeneration, heritage, place making, healthy eating, sustainability, environmental impact, social and community cohesion (Watson, 2005; Stillerman 2006; Shepherd, 2009). Based on the premise that street hawking and street markets are historically part of a wider socio-economic, political, and cultural system, this paper will concentrate on the stories of survival, resistance and metamorphosis of the ‘vital living past’ of Graham Street Market in Hong Kong’s Central District. This 150 years old market, a remarkable example of ‘living heritage’, is currently under threat due to neo-liberal logic of redevelopment and gentrification of colonial-global Hong Kong: in 2007 the Urban Renewal Authority announced its plan to destroy the vibrant market (which was declared ‘a slum’), and replace it with four brand new, sleek, luxury high-rise office buildings, hotels and shopping malls. The paper analyses the role of concerned civil society organisations (such as ‘Savethemarket’) vis-à-vis Government authorities, urban planners and developers in the battle against domicide: the destruction of home which also implies the destruction of memory (Porteous, Smith, 2001). The analysis of this historical market will shed light on the entanglement between the condition of precarity of the street hawkers and the complex socio-economic and political mechanisms which are leading to the annihilation of this ‘living heritage’.

Who has the right to remain in place?

Mara Nogueira (The London School of Economics and Political Science, UK)

How far can we stretch the concept of displacement? This paper discusses this question drawing on qualitative data collected during five months of fieldwork in the city of Belo Horizonte/Brazil regarding three cases of “displacement” connected to the World Cup. The first one concerns an informal settlement, evicted to give room for an urban mobility project. The second focuses on a group of informal workers displaced for the modernization of the local stadium. The third case discusses the struggle of a neighbourhood association to stop the construction of a hotel in their residential street. I argue that only the first case is rightfully considered a “displacement” case, in the sense that the State recognizes the right of the occupiers to be reallocated. I further discuss how the past historic struggle of the social movements for the right to dwell has engendered both legislation that acknowledges their rights and institutions that manage the process, guaranteeing some minimum rights. On the other hand, in the case of the stadium workers, their claims for the right to reallocation are based on weaker assumptions that are not covered by appropriate legislation and, therefore, not recognized by the State. In their struggle for the recognition of their rights, the workers have employed many strategies and alliances that are described in the paper. Finally, the paper raises the question of how appropriate is the use of the concept of displacement to categorize the processes unfolding in the third case. The neighbourhood association wants to keep their residential neighbourhood from changing. I argue that, although they’ve deployed a series of arguments (legal and political) to stop the hotel construction, what motivates their struggle is the desire to remain in place. However, the search for a place within the urban is a conflictive process. Who has the right to remain in place and who doesn’t? Is every claim against displacement equal through the lens of social justice? Does the concept of displacement become a-political once you stretch it too far?

Understanding multiple voices within the resistance movement of the Occupations of Izidora in Belo Horizonte, Brazil

Luciana Maciel Bizzotto (Federal University of Minas Gerais, Brazil)

Urban occupations stand out as a strategy to fight for the urban re-appropriation in the current political resistance scenario in Brazilian metropolis. What has been observed is the multiplication of horizontal occupations of empty or abandoned lands, with the support of social movements organized against the eviction of thousands of families that make up the current housing deficit in the country. This form of resistance comprises a series of discourses, considering the different actors that are activated by it. To illustrate this point, I present the case of the resistance movement of the Occupations of Izidora, located in Belo Horizonte, Minas Gerais. The network of supporters that formed the resistance process of these urban occupations – #ResisteIzidora movement – is inserted in a context of strengthening social mobilization in the city and has helped to prevent the eviction of about 8,000 families that now resist to a project that fits in strategic planning’s logic. Based on the methodology of Mapping Controversies, data were compiled through interviews, newspaper reports, blogs and Facebook pages, which were analyzed by the various discourses made by the actors of the resistance network settled – social movements, residents, universities, public institutions and others. The study has shown how even within a resistance movement, in which different actors fight jointly to the non-eviction of the occupations, they do, however, adopt different speeches, ultimately attributing the resistance process itself different meanings.

Abstracts of presentations – Session 2

Chair: Yimin Zhao
Time: Friday 02 September 2016, 16:50 - 18:30
Venue: TBC

The Revanchist Politics of Benevolent Disaster-Induced Evictions Across Metro Manila: Pasig City in the Post-Ketsana Moment

Maria Khristine Alvarez (University of the Philippines, The Philippines)

In this paper, I examine the discourse of disaster-induced evictions in Metro Manila using Pasig City as case study. I draw on critical discourse analysis of interviews and policy documents to discuss the peculiar portrayal of ‘danger zone’ evictions as both apolitical and political, and reflect on the political expediency of this particular configuration, to point to a nascent mode of enunciating and enforcing evictions. I demonstrate how portraying slum evictions as logical interventions and as “technical”, “neutral”, and “apolitical” acts of governance (Ferguson, 1994) de-problematizes the common wisdom of disaster risk management and depoliticizes ‘expert’ opinion in order to diminish the hostility at the heart of evictions. I argue that the deployment of benevolence, which materializes as performance of concern for safety, is instrumental in facilitating outward flows of unwanted bodies. Yet, I show that this benevolence is betrayed by the insistence on contested vulnerabilities and the persistence of eviction orders, by the harassment to self-demolish and ‘voluntarily relocate’ to off-city resettlement sites, and by stories of relocation that dispute the peddled promise of a safe future. I conclude that mobilizing the discourse of ‘apolitical’ yet ‘benevolent’ evictions conceals the revanchist politics of Metro Manila’s disaster resiliency program.

Gusur and Rusunawa: Rebuild Indonesia Cities from the Scratch

Syarifah Aini Dalimunthe (Indonesia Institute of Sciences, Indonesia)

Jakarta current inhabitant is 19 million and 5 million of them are occupied and clogged waterways. This has created flood, then frequently resulting in severe socioeconomic damage. City administrator is now looking for options to reduce the risk. Current city administration terms and operating procedures to reduce the risk are gusur (violent eviction) and rusunawa (low-cost apartment). By December 2015, the city administration conducted gusur program to 12,000 families occupying riverbanks in a single slum neighborhood namely Kampung Pulo in order to speed up its river normalization program. The victim of gusur is set to be relocated to the nearby rusunawa expected to be able to accommodate 4,500 families. While the rest has to survive on their own such as rented a house nearby or send their children back to hometown. Despite the housing backlog, the city administration pledged not to stop the gusur project. The term gusur is now a formula spread among city administration across Indonesia. Gusur claimed to change Indonesian cities to meet global standard, ensure public order, remove squatter settlement or clear land for infrastructure projects. However, the government has used excessive force to conduct gusur across Indonesia cities and failed to provide alternative housing or other assistance to the displaced. It has created discourses which emphasize the right of the poor in the city and their right to make a viable living.

(Re)location, Resistance and Memory: Narratives of displacement amongst earthquake relocatees in Christchurch, New Zealand

Simon Dickinson (University of Exeter, UK)

Forced relocation as a result of government initiative and intervention has received significant attention. Much of this work has focused on the entrepreneurial politics of market-orientated development (Wu, 2014) and discourses surrounding the deconcentration of the urban poor by way of clearing-the-way policy (Goetz, 2003). Yet, disasters, and the subsequent relocation of affected populations during ‘recovery’, has received less attention – presumably because the pre-text of chaos and ‘public safety’ seemingly obscures the need to examine how particular power relations/mechanisms play out under the context of ’emergency’. With this in mind, this paper develops an account of resistance and place-making amongst forced relocatees after the Christchurch earthquakes of 2010-11. Relocation was prompted following a government decision to compulsorily acquire property based on damage and future risk – the criteria for which have never been published. Arguing that local coverage has shaped discourses that speak of romanticised, homogenous forms of ‘pushing back’, I draw attention to the ephemeral and interminable acts of resistance that may not otherwise be observed during relocation. Pointing towards these alternative narratives, the paper highlights the various (and often illicit) ways in which movers sought to maintain connections with their earthquake-damaged community/property. Given the contentious process by which relocation was dictated, these acts of resistance derive from a complex interplay between exhibiting agency in ‘place-making’ and the perceived capacity to subtly undermine the power mechanisms at play in the post-quake environment. I contend that these acts have a distinct temporality and speak to motifs of absence, presence and memory.

Discussant

Hyun Bang Shin (The London School of Economics and Political Science, UK)

 

Selected Panels in 2015 AAG Annual Conference

08 Wednesday Apr 2015

Posted by Yimin in Academic, Events

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

conference, Geography

Below is a list of panels I select from the programme of this year’s AAG (Association of American Geographers) Annual Conference. Those who do research on/ through the following keywords may be of interests on this list: comparative urbanism, China/ East Asia, rights, territory, state space, mobilities, modernity, David Harvey, and other critical urban theories/ theorists.

It will be great if you could join me to audit (some of) these panels and then further our discussions in the evening drinking sessions! lol

4.21 Tue

1142 Geography and EP Thompson
is scheduled on Tuesday, 4/21/2015, from 8:00 AM – 9:40 AM in Regency A, Hyatt, West Tower, Gold Level (Organiser: Kathryn Wells)

http://meridian.aag.org/callforpapers/program/SessionDetail.cfm?SessionID=21296

1162 Mobility Transitions 1
is scheduled on Tuesday, 4/21/2015, from 8:00 AM – 9:40 AM in McCormick, Hyatt, West Tower, Silver Level (Organiser: Tim Cresswell)

http://meridian.aag.org/callforpapers/program/SessionDetail.cfm?SessionID=21590

1140 Territories of Poverty: Rethinking North and South
is scheduled on Tuesday, 4/21/2015, from 8:00 AM – 9:40 AM in Hong Kong, Hyatt, West Tower, Gold Level (Organiser: Ananya Roy)

http://meridian.aag.org/callforpapers/program/SessionDetail.cfm?SessionID=21635

1245 Thinking the Urban from….(I) comparative experiments
is scheduled on Tuesday, 4/21/2015, from 10:00 AM – 11:40 AM in Regency D, Hyatt, West Tower, Gold Level (Organiser: Fulong Wu; Jennifer Robinson)

http://meridian.aag.org/callforpapers/program/SessionDetail.cfm?SessionID=21645

1445 Thinking the Urban from….(II) relations
is scheduled on Tuesday, 4/21/2015, from 12:40 PM – 2:20 PM in Regency D, Hyatt, West Tower, Gold Level (Organiser: Fulong Wu; Jennifer Robinson)

http://meridian.aag.org/callforpapers/program/SessionDetail.cfm?SessionID=21646

1436 CITY Debates: (Re)defining the urban and the question of social justice.
is scheduled on Tuesday, 4/21/2015, from 12:40 PM – 2:20 PM in Water Tower, Hyatt, West Tower, Bronze Level (Organised by CITY and Alex Schafran; panelists inc. M. Storper)

http://meridian.aag.org/callforpapers/program/SessionDetail.cfm?SessionID=22053

1545 Thinking the Urban from….(III) elsewhere
is scheduled on Tuesday, 4/21/2015, from 2:40 PM – 4:20 PM in Regency D, Hyatt, West Tower, Gold Level (Organiser: Fulong Wu; Jennifer Robinson)

http://meridian.aag.org/callforpapers/program/SessionDetail.cfm?SessionID=21644

1645 Thinking Cities from….(IV) distinctive theorisations?
is scheduled on Tuesday, 4/21/2015, from 4:40 PM – 6:20 PM in Regency D, Hyatt, West Tower, Gold Level (Organiser: Fulong Wu; Jennifer Robinson)

http://meridian.aag.org/callforpapers/program/SessionDetail.cfm?SessionID=21554

4.22 Wed

2145 The Politics of Desire and Despair: Contextualising Rights in Urban Protests against Displacement in Asia and Beyond (1)

is scheduled on Wednesday, 4/22/2015, from 8:00 AM – 9:40 AM in Regency D, Hyatt, West Tower, Gold Level (Organiser: Hyun Bang Shin)
http://meridian.aag.org/callforpapers/program/SessionDetail.cfm?SessionID=21229

2245 The Politics of Desire and Despair: Contextualising Rights in Urban Protests against Displacement in Asia and Beyond (2)

is scheduled on Wednesday, 4/22/2015, from 10:00 AM – 11:40 AM in Regency D, Hyatt, West Tower, Gold Level (Organiser: Hyun Bang Shin)
http://meridian.aag.org/callforpapers/program/SessionDetail.cfm?SessionID=21230

2445 The Politics of Desire and Despair: Contextualising Rights in Urban Protests against Displacement in Asia and Beyond (3)

is scheduled on Wednesday, 4/22/2015, from 1:20 PM – 3:00 PM in Regency D, Hyatt, West Tower, Gold Level (Organiser: Hyun Bang Shin)
http://meridian.aag.org/callforpapers/program/SessionDetail.cfm?SessionID=21310

2521 Outcast Cities III: Spatial Strategies of/against Displacement

is scheduled on Wednesday, 4/22/2015, from 3:20 PM – 5:00 PM in Grand B, Hyatt, East Tower, Gold Level (Organisers: Asher Ghertner)
http://meridian.aag.org/callforpapers/program/SessionDetail.cfm?SessionID=22442

2508 Mobilities and Spatial Modernity in Contemporary China-2

is scheduled on Wednesday, 4/22/2015, from 3:20 PM – 5:00 PM in Skyway 282, Hyatt, East Tower, Blue Level (Organisers: Su Xiaobo and Zhu Hong)
http://meridian.aag.org/callforpapers/program/SessionDetail.cfm?SessionID=22921

2522 Author-Meets-Critics: David Harvey’s Seventeen Contradictions and the End of Capitalism

is scheduled on Wednesday, 4/22/2015, from 3:20 PM – 5:00 PM in Grand C/D North, Hyatt, East Tower, Gold Level
http://meridian.aag.org/callforpapers/program/SessionDetail.cfm?SessionID=21580

2621 Outcast Cities IV: Theorizing the Urban Beyond Displacement

is scheduled on Wednesday, 4/22/2015, from 5:20 PM – 7:00 PM in Grand B, Hyatt, East Tower, Gold Level (Organisers: Asher Ghertner; introduction by Gareth Jones)
http://meridian.aag.org/callforpapers/program/SessionDetail.cfm?SessionID=22452

2675 Place, politics and the declining city

is scheduled on Wednesday, 4/22/2015, from 5:20 PM – 7:00 PM in Lucerne 3, Swissôtel, Lucerne Level (Inc: Jamie Peck’s prst)
http://meridian.aag.org/callforpapers/program/SessionDetail.cfm?SessionID=21151

4.23 Thu

3105 Revisiting Entrepreneurialism: the logics of urban governance in systemic crisis (1)
is scheduled on Thursday, 4/23/2015, from 8:00 AM – 9:40 AM in Skyway 272, Hyatt, East Tower, Blue Level (Organised by Clark scholars)

http://meridian.aag.org/callforpapers/program/SessionDetail.cfm?SessionID=21287

3257 Marxist geography 1: Use and critique of David Harvey’s work
is scheduled on Thursday, 4/23/2015, from 10:00 AM – 11:40 AM in Addams, Hyatt, West Tower, Silver Level (Organiser: Jamie Gough; focusing on Harvey’s works)

http://meridian.aag.org/callforpapers/program/SessionDetail.cfm?SessionID=22672

3245 The Value of Capitalist Natures III: Life, Waste, Finance
is scheduled on Thursday, 4/23/2015, from 10:00 AM – 11:40 AM in Regency D, Hyatt, West Tower, Gold Level (Organiser: Kelly Kay)

http://meridian.aag.org/callforpapers/program/SessionDetail.cfm?SessionID=21432

3445 The Value of Capitalist Natures IV: Future Directions
is scheduled on Thursday, 4/23/2015, from 1:20 PM – 3:00 PM in Regency D, Hyatt, West Tower, Gold Level (Organiser: Kelly Kay)

http://meridian.aag.org/callforpapers/program/SessionDetail.cfm?SessionID=21433

3442 Urban Geography Plenary Lecture: Ananya Roy, “What is Urban About Critical Urban Theory?”
is scheduled on Thursday, 4/23/2015, from 1:20 PM – 3:00 PM in Regency A, Hyatt, West Tower, Gold Level

http://meridian.aag.org/callforpapers/program/SessionDetail.cfm?SessionID=21816

3457 Marxist geography 2: Nature, economy, employment
is scheduled on Thursday, 4/23/2015, from 1:20 PM – 3:00 PM in Addams, Hyatt, West Tower, Silver Level (Organiser: Jamie Gough; inc. K. Cox’s prst)

http://meridian.aag.org/callforpapers/program/SessionDetail.cfm?SessionID=22675

3557 Marxist geography 3: Harvey, capitalism, technologies and nature
is scheduled on Thursday, 4/23/2015, from 3:20 PM – 5:00 PM in Addams, Hyatt, West Tower, Silver Level (Organiser: Jamie Gough)

http://meridian.aag.org/callforpapers/program/SessionDetail.cfm?SessionID=22678

3549 The Roepke Lecture in Economic Geography: “The right to work, and the right at work” – Jamie Peck, University of British Columbia
is scheduled on Thursday, 4/23/2015, from 3:20 PM – 5:00 PM in Crystal B, Hyatt, West Tower, Green Level (By Jamie Peck)

http://meridian.aag.org/callforpapers/program/SessionDetail.cfm?SessionID=21441

3675 Current Events Roundtable: The Occupy Central/Umbrella Movement in Hong Kong
is scheduled on Thursday, 4/23/2015, from 5:20 PM – 7:00 PM in Lucerne 3, Swissôtel, Lucerne Level (Organiser: A. Murphy and G. Lin)

http://meridian.aag.org/callforpapers/program/SessionDetail.cfm?SessionID=23813

2015 AAG IJURR Lecture

is scheduled on Thursday, 4/23, from 5:20 PM – 7:00 PM in Crystal B, Hyatt Regency, West Tower, Green Level

This year the IJURR Lecture will be given by Nik Theodore, and is entitled: Subject Spaces: The Ethics of Co-producing Urban Research.

4.24 Fri

4150 On Stuart Hall

is scheduled on Friday, 4/24/2015, from 8:00 AM – 9:40 AM in Crystal C, Hyatt, West Tower, Green Level (Organiser: Sharad Chari)

http://meridian.aag.org/callforpapers/program/SessionDetail.cfm?SessionID=22571

4418 Tuan’s Next Generation: Modern scholarship influenced by the iconic geographer
is scheduled on Friday, 4/24/2015, from 1:20 PM – 3:00 PM in Columbus IJ, Hyatt, East Tower, Gold Level

http://meridian.aag.org/callforpapers/program/SessionDetail.cfm?SessionID=22368

4542 Territory, Politics, Governance Annual Lecture – Bob Jessop
is scheduled on Friday, 4/24/2015, from 3:20 PM – 5:00 PM in Regency A, Hyatt, West Tower, Gold Level

http://meridian.aag.org/callforpapers/program/SessionDetail.cfm?SessionID=23491

4658 Cities of Tomorrow: In Honor of Peter Hall II
is scheduled on Friday, 4/24/2015, from 5:20 PM – 7:00 PM in Burnham, Hyatt, West Tower, Silver Level (Chaired by Erica Schoenberger; panelists inc. M. Castells and M. Storper)

http://meridian.aag.org/callforpapers/program/SessionDetail.cfm?SessionID=21241

4.25 Sat

5126 Cases, spaces and situations I
is scheduled on Saturday, 4/25/2015, from 8:00 AM – 9:40 AM in Grand Suite 3, Hyatt, East Tower, Gold Level (Organiser: Murray M. Low)

http://meridian.aag.org/callforpapers/program/SessionDetail.cfm?SessionID=21339

5161 Migration in China (I): The Social and Cultural Impact

is scheduled on Saturday, 4/25/2015, from 8:00 AM – 9:40 AM in Horner, Hyatt, West Tower, Silver Level (Organisers: Huang Youqin and He Shenjing)

http://meridian.aag.org/callforpapers/program/SessionDetail.cfm?SessionID=21195

5226 Cases, spaces and situations II
is scheduled on Saturday, 4/25/2015, from 10:00 AM – 11:40 AM in Grand Suite 3, Hyatt, East Tower, Gold Level (Organiser: Murray M. Low)

http://meridian.aag.org/callforpapers/program/SessionDetail.cfm?SessionID=21340

5237 Grounding Knowledge, Assembling Policies II – Urban policy circulations in the Global South
is scheduled on Saturday, 4/25/2015, from 10:00 AM – 11:40 AM in Wrigley, Hyatt, West Tower, Bronze Level (Organiser: Gabriel Silvestre and Luis Regis Coli)

http://meridian.aag.org/callforpapers/program/SessionDetail.cfm?SessionID=21679

5461 Contesting Urban Space in East Asia: Recasting Neoliberalism upon Housing
is scheduled on Saturday, 4/25/2015, from 2:00 PM – 3:40 PM in Horner, Hyatt, West Tower, Silver Level (Organisers: Hyun Bang Shin and Asato Saito)

http://meridian.aag.org/callforpapers/program/SessionDetail.cfm?SessionID=21496

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