Juxtacity: An approach to urban difference, division, authority and citizenship

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Juxtacity: An approach to urban difference, division, authority and citizenship. / Hammar, Amanda; Millstein, Marianne.

In: Urban Forum, Vol. 31, No. 3, 10.2020, p. 273-288.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Hammar, A & Millstein, M 2020, 'Juxtacity: An approach to urban difference, division, authority and citizenship', Urban Forum, vol. 31, no. 3, pp. 273-288. https://doi.org/10.1007/s12132-020-09402-8

APA

Hammar, A., & Millstein, M. (2020). Juxtacity: An approach to urban difference, division, authority and citizenship. Urban Forum, 31(3), 273-288. https://doi.org/10.1007/s12132-020-09402-8

Vancouver

Hammar A, Millstein M. Juxtacity: An approach to urban difference, division, authority and citizenship. Urban Forum. 2020 Oct;31(3):273-288. https://doi.org/10.1007/s12132-020-09402-8

Author

Hammar, Amanda ; Millstein, Marianne. / Juxtacity: An approach to urban difference, division, authority and citizenship. In: Urban Forum. 2020 ; Vol. 31, No. 3. pp. 273-288.

Bibtex

@article{ec6ff025eea549f58b08f37208806e7d,
title = "Juxtacity: An approach to urban difference, division, authority and citizenship",
abstract = "Difference is foundational to urban governance and urban life. This article—and the special issue—focuses analytically on the juxtaposition of multiple urban differences, and what happens especially in relation to urban authority and citizenship when such differences articulate with each other. This analytical work is based on a conceptual lens we call juxtacity, which is used to examine the origins, dynamics, and effects of urban divides, where urban divides are seen as active, situated domains in themselves that provide key opportunities for understanding and theorizing complex urban dynamics. The juxtacity approach emphasizes three key elements of difference and division—relationality, articulation, and productive co-constitution—and their differentiated effects. The focus is especially on but not limited to more overt, visible structures of urban domination, but consciously counters the ways in which more common sense hierarchies of power leave out a wide range of subtler forms of inequality, domination, exclusion, and violence. These latter are crucial for understanding differences and divisions in cities around the world. The juxtacity approach counters EuroAmerican-as-universal urban theory. Including cases from Africa and Asia, the special issue employs a form of openly comparative southern urbanism that contributes to the wider project of theorizing from the south/southeast.",
keywords = "Faculty of Theology, Juxtacity, Urban divides, urban authority, urban citizenship",
author = "Amanda Hammar and Marianne Millstein",
year = "2020",
month = oct,
doi = "10.1007/s12132-020-09402-8",
language = "English",
volume = "31",
pages = "273--288",
journal = "Urban Forum",
issn = "1015-3802",
publisher = "Springer",
number = "3",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Juxtacity: An approach to urban difference, division, authority and citizenship

AU - Hammar, Amanda

AU - Millstein, Marianne

PY - 2020/10

Y1 - 2020/10

N2 - Difference is foundational to urban governance and urban life. This article—and the special issue—focuses analytically on the juxtaposition of multiple urban differences, and what happens especially in relation to urban authority and citizenship when such differences articulate with each other. This analytical work is based on a conceptual lens we call juxtacity, which is used to examine the origins, dynamics, and effects of urban divides, where urban divides are seen as active, situated domains in themselves that provide key opportunities for understanding and theorizing complex urban dynamics. The juxtacity approach emphasizes three key elements of difference and division—relationality, articulation, and productive co-constitution—and their differentiated effects. The focus is especially on but not limited to more overt, visible structures of urban domination, but consciously counters the ways in which more common sense hierarchies of power leave out a wide range of subtler forms of inequality, domination, exclusion, and violence. These latter are crucial for understanding differences and divisions in cities around the world. The juxtacity approach counters EuroAmerican-as-universal urban theory. Including cases from Africa and Asia, the special issue employs a form of openly comparative southern urbanism that contributes to the wider project of theorizing from the south/southeast.

AB - Difference is foundational to urban governance and urban life. This article—and the special issue—focuses analytically on the juxtaposition of multiple urban differences, and what happens especially in relation to urban authority and citizenship when such differences articulate with each other. This analytical work is based on a conceptual lens we call juxtacity, which is used to examine the origins, dynamics, and effects of urban divides, where urban divides are seen as active, situated domains in themselves that provide key opportunities for understanding and theorizing complex urban dynamics. The juxtacity approach emphasizes three key elements of difference and division—relationality, articulation, and productive co-constitution—and their differentiated effects. The focus is especially on but not limited to more overt, visible structures of urban domination, but consciously counters the ways in which more common sense hierarchies of power leave out a wide range of subtler forms of inequality, domination, exclusion, and violence. These latter are crucial for understanding differences and divisions in cities around the world. The juxtacity approach counters EuroAmerican-as-universal urban theory. Including cases from Africa and Asia, the special issue employs a form of openly comparative southern urbanism that contributes to the wider project of theorizing from the south/southeast.

KW - Faculty of Theology

KW - Juxtacity

KW - Urban divides

KW - urban authority

KW - urban citizenship

U2 - 10.1007/s12132-020-09402-8

DO - 10.1007/s12132-020-09402-8

M3 - Journal article

VL - 31

SP - 273

EP - 288

JO - Urban Forum

JF - Urban Forum

SN - 1015-3802

IS - 3

ER -

ID: 254509763