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European cities are contributing to the development of a more
sustainable urban system that is capable of coping with economic
crises, ecological challenges and social disparities in different
nation-states and regions throughout Europe. This book reveals in a
pluralistic way how European cities are generating new approaches
to their sustainable development, and the special contribution of
culture to these processes. It addresses both a deficit of
attention to small and medium-sized cities in the framework of
European sustainable development, and an underestimation of the
role of culture, artistic expression and creativity for integrated
development of the city as a prerequisite to urban sustainability.
On the basis of a broad collection of case studies throughout
Europe, representing a variety of regionally specific cultural
models of sustainable development, the book investigates how
participative culture, community arts, and more generally,
creativity of civic imagination are conducive to the goal of a
sustainable future of small and medium-sized cities. This is an
essential volume for researchers and postgraduate students in urban
studies, cultural studies, cultural geography and urban sociology
as well as for policymakers and practitioners wanting to understand
the specificity of European cities as hubs of innovation,
creativity and artistic industriousness.
Public Space: Between Reimagination and Occupation examines
contemporary public space as a result of intense social production
reflecting contradictory trends: the long-lasting effects of the
global crisis, manifested in supranational trade-offs between
political influence, state power and private ownership; and the
appearance of global counter-actors, enabled by the expansion of
digital communication and networking technologies and rooted into
new participatory cultures, easily growing into mobile cultures of
protest. The highlighted cases from Europe, Asia, Africa and North
America reveal the roots of the pre-crisis processes of
redistribution of capital and power as an aspect of the transition
from the consumerist past into the post-consumerist present, by
tracing the slow growth of social discontent that has led only a
few years later to the mobilization of a new kind of self-conscious
globally-acting class. This edited volume brings together a broad
range of interdisciplinary discussions and approaches, providing
sociologists, cultural geographers, and urban planning academics
and students with an opportunity to explore the various social,
cultural, economic and political factors leading to reappropriation
and reimagination of the urban commons in the cities within which
we live.
Public Space: Between Reimagination and Occupation examines
contemporary public space as a result of intense social production
reflecting contradictory trends: the long-lasting effects of the
global crisis, manifested in supranational trade-offs between
political influence, state power and private ownership; and the
appearance of global counter-actors, enabled by the expansion of
digital communication and networking technologies and rooted into
new participatory cultures, easily growing into mobile cultures of
protest. The highlighted cases from Europe, Asia, Africa and North
America reveal the roots of the pre-crisis processes of
redistribution of capital and power as an aspect of the transition
from the consumerist past into the post-consumerist present, by
tracing the slow growth of social discontent that has led only a
few years later to the mobilization of a new kind of self-conscious
globally-acting class. This edited volume brings together a broad
range of interdisciplinary discussions and approaches, providing
sociologists, cultural geographers, and urban planning academics
and students with an opportunity to explore the various social,
cultural, economic and political factors leading to reappropriation
and reimagination of the urban commons in the cities within which
we live.
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