Clive Barnett, University of Exeter: Remarks on Does democracy need the city? Conversations on Power and Space in the City Workshop No.

Similar documents
Notes for a presentation at a workshop on Politicizing the Post-Political City, The Open University, 13 th -14 th June 2011, Milton Keynes.

CHANTAL MOUFFE GLOSSARY

Chantal Mouffe On the Political

Cemal Burak Tansel (ed)

This chapter examines critical theories of democracy which are concerned with the type of

1 What does it matter what human rights mean?

The uses and abuses of evolutionary theory in political science: a reply to Allan McConnell and Keith Dowding

Post-print del autor

Lecture 25 Sociology 621 HEGEMONY & LEGITIMATION December 12, 2011

Left-wing Exile in Mexico,

Part III Presidential Republics: Their Past and Their Future Introduction

Panelli R. (2004): Social Geographies. From Difference to Action. SAGE, London, 287 pp.

The roles of theory & meta-theory in studying socio-economic development models. Bob Jessop Institute for Advanced Studies Lancaster University

We the Stakeholders: The Power of Representation beyond Borders? Clara Brandi

Police-Community Engagement and Counter-Terrorism: Developing a regional, national and international hub. UK-US Workshop Summary Report December 2010

On Becoming Political: The Political in Subjectivity Jouni Häkli & Kirsi Pauliina Kallio

Melbourne School of Government Conference: Democracy in Transition. Conference Program. 6-8 December 2015 Venue: The Langham Hotel, Melbourne

From Global Colonialism To Global Coloniality

Exploring the fast/slow thinking: implications for political analysis: Gerry Stoker, March 2016

Sociological Marxism Volume I: Analytical Foundations. Table of Contents & Outline of topics/arguments/themes

Cultural Groups and Women s (CGW) Proposal: Student Learning Outcomes (SLO)

1 Many relevant texts have been published in the open access journal of the European Institute for

This is the pre-publication submitted version of the following paper:

A HUMAN SECURITY APPROACH TO PEACEMAKING IN AFRICA

Discourse Analysis and Nation-building. Greek policies applied in W. Thrace ( ) 1

Part 1. Understanding Human Rights

4 Activism and the Academy

Introduction and overview

BOOK REVIEWS. Raffaella Fittipaldi University of Florence and University of Turin

Summary. A deliberative ritual Mediating between the criminal justice system and the lifeworld. 1 Criminal justice under pressure

Chapter One Introduction Finland s security policy is not based on historical or cultural ties and affinities or shared values, but on an unsentimenta

Precarity Platform for a Scientific Network of Political Excellence

Introduction. Jonathan S. Davies and David L. Imbroscio State University of New York Press, Albany

Who Killed the Berkeley School? Struggles Over Radical Criminology by Herman & Julia Schwendinger with foreword from Jeff Shantz

overproduction and underemployment are temporally offset. He cites the crisis of 1848, the great depression of the 1930s, the post-wwii era, and the

In defense of Venezuela

TUSHNET-----Introduction THE IDEA OF A CONSTITUTIONAL ORDER

F851QP GOVERNMENT AND POLITICS. Unit F851: Contemporary Politics of the UK Specimen Paper. Advanced Subsidiary GCE. Time: 1 hour 30 mins

Center for Migration, Education and Cultural Studies Carl von Ossietzky University Oldenburg, Germany Prof. Martin Butler, Prof Paul Mecheril

Environmental Activism, Corruption and Local Responses to EU Enlargement: Case Studies from Eastern and Western Europe 1

Juridical Coups d état all over the place. Comment on The Juridical Coup d état and the Problem of Authority by Alec Stone Sweet

Strengthening the Foundation for World Peace - A Case for Democratizing the United Nations

The Challenge of Multiculturalism: Beyond Liberalism and Communitarianism

Semiotics of culture and communication

power, briefly outline the arguments of the three papers, and then draw upon these

Commentary. The politics of behaviour change. Environment and Planning A 2010, volume 42, pages 1881 ^ 1886

Critical Theory and Constructivism

disposes with homogeneous and teleological assumptions of time and universalising imaginations of space. He traces modernity s fractured, uneven and

Social Studies Standard Articulated by Grade Level

SOME PROBLEMS IN THE USE OF LANGUAGE IN ECONOMICS Warren J. Samuels

Methodological Challenges

Public sphere and dynamics of the Internet

Dialogue of Civilizations: Finding Common Approaches to Promoting Peace and Human Development

Tactics: Building and winning campaigns. Feb Johannesburg, South Africa

Aconsideration of the sources of law in a legal

The Politics of reconciliation in multicultural societies 1, Will Kymlicka and Bashir Bashir

ADVANCED POLITICAL ANALYSIS

Getting strategic: vertically integrated approaches

5th European Conference of Ministers responsible for the cultural heritage. 5th European Conference of Ministers, Council of Europe

Civil Society Declaration 2016

SANPAD DISSEMINATION WORKSHOP AUGUST 2006 WRITING POLICY BRIEFS Facilitated by: Dr. Chris Landsberg Prof. Paul Hebinck. DAY 1 What is Policy?

Preface Is there a place for the nation in democratic theory? Frontiers are the sine qua non of the emergence of the people ; without them, the whole

THEORISING EMERGENT PUBLICS. Clive Barnett. Paper presented at Creating Publics Workshop, University of Westminster, July 2011

The Elements of Legitimacy: The State and the United Nations System 1

UNITED NATIONS EDUCATIONAL, SCIENTIFIC AND CULTURAL ORGANIZATION CONVENTION CONCERNING THE PROTECTION OF THE WORLD CULTURAL AND NATURAL HERITAGE

Welsh, John F. (2009). Theses on College and University Administration: A Critical Perspective. Workplace, 16,

Chapter II European integration and the concept of solidarity

UNITED NATIONS EDUCATIONAL, SCIENTIFIC AND CULTURAL ORGANIZATION. Address by Mr Koïchiro Matsuura

Rechtsgeschichte. WOZU Rechtsgeschichte? Rg Dag Michalsen. Rechts Rg geschichte

Public relations, activism and social movements: Critical perspectives

Secretariat Distr. LIMITED

Ideology COLIN J. BECK

BOOK PROFILE: RELIGION, POLITICS,

Global Citizenship Education in comparative perspective: epistemology, methodology and politics DR. APRIL R. BICCUM AUSTRALIAN NATIONAL UNIVERSITY

Abolishing Ius Sanguinis Citizenship: A Proposal Too Restrained and Too Radical

Theory and the Levels of Analysis

Brand South Africa Research Report

Chapter 1: Introduction

Lilie Chouliaraki Cosmopolitanism. Book section

SAMPLE CHAPTERS UNESCO EOLSS POWER AND THE STATE. John Scott Department of Sociology, University of Plymouth, UK

Analytical Challenges for Neoinstitutional Theories of Institutional Change in Comparative Political Science*

Deep Democracy: Community, Diversity, Transformation. In recent years, scholars of American philosophy have done considerable

Politics EDU5420 Spring 2011 Prof. Frank Smith Group Robert Milani, Carl Semmler & Denise Smith. Analysis of Deborah Stone s Policy Paradox

On Democratic Reason Ira Katznelson [Hertie School, June 12, 2018]

*** DRAFT 16 February 2012 *** SAFIS. Declaration on International Solidarity and People s Cooperation

1 Introduction: state feminism and the political representation of women

Mark Scheme (Results) January GCE Government & Politics 6GP03 3D GLOBAL POLITICS

AMY GUTMANN: THE CONSTRUCTIVE POTENTIAL OF COMMUNITARIAN VALUES DOES GUTMANN SUCCEED IN SHOWING THE CONSTRUCTIVE POTENTIAL OF COMMUNITARIAN VALUES?

Notre Dame Journal of Law, Ethics & Public Policy

POLITICAL SCIENCE 566 POLITICAL INTEREST GROUPS Spring 2009 Andrew McFarland

DEVELOPMENT EDUCATION, CITIZENSHIP AND GLOBAL CIVIL SOCIETY

! # % & ( ) ) ) ) ) +,. / 0 1 # ) 2 3 % ( &4& 58 9 : ) & ;; &4& ;;8;

Rationalization and the Modernity of Europe

Mexico and the global problematic: power relations, knowledge and communication in neoliberal Mexico Gómez-Llata Cázares, E.G.

The LSA at 50: Overcoming the Fear Of Missing Out on the Next Occupy

Russia in a Changing World: Continued Priorities and New Opportunities

The twelve assumptions of an alter-globalisation strategy 1

"New Mobilities, Old Displacements: Protracted Refugee Situations in Theory and (Canadian) Practice" Jennifer Hyndman, Centre for Refugee Studies,

The Way Forward: Pathways toward Transformative Change

UNDERSTANDING AND WORKING WITH POWER. Effective Advising in Statebuilding and Peacebuilding Contexts How 2015, Geneva- Interpeace

Transcription:

Clive Barnett, University of Exeter: Remarks on Does democracy need the city? Conversations on Power and Space in the City Workshop No. 5, Spaces of Democracy, 19 th May 2015, Bartlett School, UCL. 1). Introduction Recent political events such as the uprisings associated with the Arab Spring in 2011, protest activism from Spain to Greece to Turkey, and the proliferation of Occupy activism in cities across the world, have all served as the occasions for rehearsing arguments about the importance of the city as an important crucible for radical democratic expression. What is notable about the exemplars that recur in such discussions is the degree to which they take place in cities without limiting their political demands to urban issues, narrowly conceived, or only addressing urban-scale institutions as the objects of those demands. I want to suggest that the urban can be creatively conceptualised as playing multiple roles in configuring democratic politics. I want to suggest, more specfiically, that urban processes might be more important to shaping the dynamics of contemporary democratic politics than is often acknowledged, but that The City is not necessarily the key stake or site for such politics.

2). Political/Spaces Fields such as radical geography, critical human geography, critical urban studies, all tend to share in a movement-centric view of politics, one closely associated with a privileging of activist imaginations when it comes to understanding political processes. The models of politics favoured in these fields define their own significance by the distance they take from the most obvious and immediate understandings of politics available to us. In turn, the most forceful discussions of democracy in these spatial disciplines have cleaved to a canon of post-marxist thought. The styles of political theory most favoured as reference points by spatial theorists tend to belong to a broad tradition of what we might call a generalised agonistics. Agonistic approaches tend to conflate the meaning of democracy with a quite specific understanding of the political. As a result they tend to define democracy in a rather one-sided way, reserving genuinely democratic energies for the contestation and disruption of identities and hegemonies and settled formations. There is a strong affinity between traditions of spatial theory and those styles of political theory that favour more or less ontological determinations of the meaning of the political as distinct from mere politics. In spatial theory, there has been an imperative to develop alternative spatial ontologies which trump flat, bounded, static concepts of space with relational, produced, assembled, more bendy, more wobbly images of space. 2

Ontologies of the political provide important ballast for the political inflection given to spatial theory over the last four decades, in so far as they sustain the idea that genuine political energy always involves inaugural moments of transformation and that genuine critical activity always involves the exposure of contingency, the elaboration of uncertainty, or the affirmation of creativity. Both fields therefore sustain a distinctive spatialization of the political imagination, in which genuine political energy is always to be found off-centre, at the margins. The master metaphor of this shared style of theory is that of blindness-and-insight, whether inflected by a vocabulary of constitutive outsides, hegemonic closures, suturings, or partitions of the sensible an extruded or marginalised term is always identified as the point around which systems of power are temporarily closed and secured, and around which they might in turn be pried open and made anew. The blindness-and-insight frame in turn bolsters a well-established image of how political change can and should take place, an image structured around a simplistic spatialisation of openness and closure, fixity and mobility, settlement and disruption. This way of thinking about the spatialities of politics therefore depends upon a unexamined imagination of time: political time is imagined to consist of a kind of punctuated equilibrium, where moments of dramatic, wholesale transformation of entire fields of action interrupt periods of durable and predictable routine. 3

It is this temporal imagination that underwrites the privilege accorded by critical spatial theory to specific dimensions of urban space as the primal scenes of authentically political political action: spaces of demonstration and spaces of assembly and spaces of confrontation. 4

3). Decomposing urban politics There is a recurring tendency to condemn existing manifestations of democracy as illusory the representative dimensions of democracy are often condemned in these terms as pale imitations of more preferable participatory practices; elections are often condemned as a mockery of genuinely democratic ideals. This rhetoric of democracy as illusion is indicative of a series of distinctive features of democracy as a concept: a certain sort of perfectionism is built into the concept in theory and practice; it is an unavoidably normative concept; and it is a concept that is internally complex. With this in view, we might start the task of thinking of democracy geographically by returning to the idea that is an essentially contested concept a concept that internally combines more than one value, a concept whose meaning always arises in situations of evaluation, and a concept that accrues new dimensions through application in novel contexts. These values and dimensions may include, for example, participation, accountability, efficiency, legitimacy, and representation; practices that all have their own distinctive shapes. If we follow this lead, then rather than presuming that we know in advance the identity of those urban spaces in which democratic politics will occasionally show up, we might start instead by asking What do cities have to do with the democracy? 5

Of course, definitions of the city or the urban are also prone to a degree of variety (although these are not, I think, essentially contested concepts in the strong sense mentioned above). Urban theorists have often worried about the difficulty of isolating a single, epistemologically coherent or ontologically stable object of analysis. But perhaps we should just make a virtue out of the fact that different intellectual traditions focus upon different understandings of the urban: - Some traditions think of the city primarily as an arena of capital accumulation and social reproduction; - Sometimes the idea of the city stands as a model for the public sphere, or the privileged figure for a self-governing political community; - And sometimes the city is used as shorthand for a notion of jurisdictional scale, as a distinct location for government or as a field of governance. Each of these traditions picks out some important aspect of urban processes that might well be important to thinking about the relationship between space and democratic politics. We might notice that these three dimensions of the urban resemble three dimensions of democratic opinion and will-formation a causal dimension of being drawn into a community of shared fate; a cultural dimension of recognising common interests through mediums of anonymous public communication; and a dimension of effective agency, of being able to act in concert. Splicing this pluralism of approaches to urban politics together with a multidimensional sense of democracy open up a series of questions for further inquiry: 6

What role do urban processes, if any, play in generating issues of public concern that democratic politics is called upon to address? What role do urban practices play, if any, in configuring the constituencies and interests and parties through whom democratic politics is articulated? What role, if any, do urban institutions play in the effective enactment of democratic decision-making? In short, the response to the question What do cities have to do with democracy? is It depends. A critical theory of democracy would find its place in the analysis of how this contingency is practically enacted. It would be a form of analysis that inquired into the ways in which democratic energies sometimes emerge in urban spaces, sometimes are articulated by urban actors, sometimes around urbanized issues, and sometimes through urbanized mediums. It would be a form of analysis able to develop an appreciation of urban politics that escapes the intellectual, imaginary and disciplinary confines of the city. 7