17 Coda: Critical Urban Theory, Reloaded? dialogue with Martín Arboleda Sources and Acknowledgments.
Includes bibliographical references.
Preface ; Framings ; 1 The Problematique of Critique ; 2 What Is Critical Urban Theory? ; Urban Strategies, Urban Ideologies ; 3 Cities and the Geographies of Actually Existing Neoliberalism with Nik Theodore ; 4 From Global Cities to Globalized Urbanization with Roger Keil.
14 The Agency of Design in an Age of Urbanization dialogue with Daniel Ibañez 15 Assemblage, Actor-Networks and the Challenges of Critical Urban Theory with David J. Madden and David Wachsmuth ; 16 Introducing the Urban Theory Lab.
5 Territorial Competitiveness: Lineages, Practices, Ideologies with David Wachsmuth 6 Good Governance: Ideology of Sustainable Neoliberalism? ; 7 Open City or the Right to the City? ; 8 Is Tactical Urbanism an Alternative to Neoliberal Urbanism?
9 Cities for People, Not for Profit? with Peter Marcuse and Margit Mayer 10 After Neoliberalization? with Jamie Peck and Nik Theodore ; New Urban Geographies ; 11 Planetary Urbanization with Christian Schmid ; 12 Urban Revolution? ; 13 The Hinterland, Urbanized?
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Urbanization is transforming the planet, within and beyond cities, at all spatial scales. In this book, Neil Brenner mobilizes the tools of critical urban theory to deconstruct some of the dominant urban discourses of our time, which naturalize, and thus depoliticize, the enclosures, exclusions, injustices and irrationalities of neoliberal urbanism. In so doing, Brenner advocates a constant reinvention of the framing categories, methods and assumptions of critical urban theory in relation to the rapidly mutating geographies of capitalist urbanization. Only a theory that is dynamic--which is constantly being transformed in relation to the restlessly evolving social worlds and territorial landscapes it aspires to grasp--can be a genuinely critical theory.