Since the 1970s, cities are changing from centers of production
to centers of consumption. The question is how to manage and
respond to this new view and function of cities. All over the world
we now see how industrial areas, former harbors, old-fashioned
office buildings, and other premises strongly connected with the
industrial and productive function of cities and urban regions are
being reconstituted as apartments, lofts, condominiums, and houses.
This is thought to be the domain of the "creative class."
But is this true? Does the creative class exist and if so, who
belongs to it? Can we actually speak of a "class," suggesting it is
a rather homogeneous group? Does the growth of the creative class
occur at the expense of groups that are less able to meet the
demands of the knowledge society?
"Lon Deben" is a sociologist in the Department of Sociology and
Anthropology at the University of Amsterdam (the Netherlands).
"Marco Bontje" is a geographer at the research institute AMIDST in
the Department of Geography and Planning at the University of
Amsterdam (the Netherlands).
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