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The Urbanism of Exception

The Urbanism of Exception

The Urbanism of Exception

The Dynamics of Global City Building in the Twenty-First Century
Martin J. Murray, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
June 2017
Available
Paperback
9781316620526

    This book challenges the conventional (modernist-inspired) understanding of urbanization as a universal process tied to the ideal-typical model of the modern metropolis with its origins in the grand Western experience of city-building. At the start of the twenty-first century, the familiar idea of the 'city' - or 'urbanism' as we know it - has experienced such profound mutations in both structure and form that the customary epistemological categories and prevailing conceptual frameworks that predominate in conventional urban theory are no longer capable of explaining the evolving patterns of city-making. Global urbanism has increasingly taken shape as vast, distended city-regions, where urbanizing landscapes are increasingly fragmented into discontinuous assemblages of enclosed enclaves characterized by global connectivity and concentrated wealth, on the one side, and distressed zones of neglect and impoverishment, on the other. These emergent patterns of what might be called enclave urbanism have gone hand-in-hand with the new modes of urban governance, where the crystallization of privatized regulatory regimes has effectively shielded wealthy enclaves from public oversight and interference.

    • Applies twenty-first-century context to conventional city-building theory, allowing readers to understand how conventional urban theory does and does not work in the present day
    • Provides a theoretical reworking of modernist conceptions of city-building
    • Numerous examples allow readers to apply a synthetic account of urban transformation on a global scale

    Product details

    June 2017
    Paperback
    9781316620526
    416 pages
    229 × 153 × 23 mm
    0.58kg
    6 b/w illus.
    Available

    Table of Contents

    • Preface
    • Acknowledgements
    • Introduction: the eclipse of modernist city building and the modern metropolis
    • Part I. Setting the Stage:
    • 1. Global urbanism at the start of the twenty-first century
    • 2 The shape of cities to come: distended urban form as the template for global urbanism
    • Part II. Aggregate Urbanism:
    • 3. Spatial restructuring on a global scale: enclave urbanism and the fragmentation of urban space
    • 4. Cities as an assemblage of enclaves: realizing the expectations of Late Modernity
    • Part III. Zone Formats and the Urbanism of Exception:
    • 5. Autonomous zones and the eclipse of territorial sovereignty
    • 6. Typologies of zones
    • 7. Hybrid zones and the breakdown of conventional modalities of urban governance
    • 8. Urbanism as exception
    • Bibliography
    • Index.
      Author
    • Martin J. Murray , University of Michigan, Ann Arbor

      Martin J. Murray is a Professor of Urban Planning at the Taubman College urban planning faculty. He is also Adjunct Professor in the Department of Afroamerican and African Studies at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor. His current research engages the fields of urban studies and planning, global urbanism, cultural geography, distressed urbanism, development, historical sociology, and African studies. In addition to six books and three co-edited volumes, he has produced close to eighty journal articles and book chapters that focus on diverse geographical areas of the world at different historical periods, ranging from colonial Indochina to contemporary southern Africa.