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Scientific Article details

Title Policy mobilities, politics and place: The making of financial urban futures
ID_Doc 69034
Authors Ward, K
Title Policy mobilities, politics and place: The making of financial urban futures
Year 2018
Published European Urban And Regional Studies, 25, 3
DOI 10.1177/0969776417731405
Abstract The comparative and extrospective nature of contemporary urban policy-making is one that has demanded our attention in recent years. Relatively long established and formal inter-urban networks of professionals of one sort or another have been joined by activists, consultants, financiers, lawyers and think tankers who have involved themselves in the arriving at, and making up of, urban policy. Through conferences, documents, knowledge banks, policy tourism, power-points and webinars, an emergent informational infrastructure has emerged to shape and structure the circulations and making of policy-making across a numbers of areas. From aging to creativity, climate change to drugs, education to transport, urban policies in different spheres have been rendered mobile. There is political work of adaptation, mediation and translation that has to be done to move policies from one location to another, of course. In some cases these policies appear in a range of locations, while in others they do not, a reminder - if one was needed - that those involved in the making up of policy are not always able to render all elements of the future under their control. This emphasis on the relational and territorial geographies of global-urban policy-making captures some of the issues facing those who lead cities. This paper sets out some of the intellectial challenges for those working on these issues, highlighting some potentially fruitful ways forward, illustrating the main arguments through the use of Tax Increment Financing, a financial value-capturing model.
Author Keywords Policy mobilities; Tax Increment Financing; urban policy; value capture
Index Keywords Index Keywords
Document Type Other
Open Access Open Access
Source Social Science Citation Index (SSCI); Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Social Science & Humanities (CPCI-SSH)
EID WOS:000439592500004
WoS Category Environmental Studies; Regional & Urban Planning; Urban Studies
Research Area Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Public Administration; Urban Studies
PDF https://pure.manchester.ac.uk/ws/files/59166871/EURS_accepted_MS_23_08_2017.docx
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