Tuesday 11 October 2022

Call for Papers: Neoliberalism’s Authoritarian/Illiberal Turn and Urban/Regional Futures

 

Call for Papers

Urban Studies Special Issue

Neoliberalism’s Authoritarian/Illiberal Turn and Urban/Regional Futures

 

Since Nancy Fraser (2017) talked about “The End of Progressive Neoliberalism”, the reasons to suggest that neoliberalism has entered a new phase have piled up. Not only have we witnessed the populist authoritarian leaders of the Global South who had come into power much earlier than their Global North counterparts consolidate their power, but also seen populist, illiberal politics culminate in the Global North. From Hungary and Poland to France and Italy in Europe to the US, this descent into illiberalism in arguably liberal democracies has unsettled erstwhile views that have positioned Global South cases as authoritarian/illiberal deviants of the neoliberal status quo. Hailed as a “global authoritarian/illiberal turn” in response to its geographic scope and extent, this new wave has increasingly been considered to mark the latest variant of the neoliberal wave that has shaped global capitalism. There is growing agreement that the persistence and deepening of neoliberal policies is accompanied by the resurgence of authoritarian/illiberal politics, albeit one that in part reconfigures authoritarian tendencies from neoliberalism’s past (Hall, 1984) and deepens its existing anti-democratic tendencies (Brown, 2018). While Peck and Theodore (2019: 249) highlight the “more brutal face” that characterises the “unapologetic mutation of late neoliberalism”, Hendrickse (2018 after Aiyar, 2011, 2016) brought forward the term ‘neo-illiberalism’ to describe this qualitative shift – one that is distinguished by constitutional restraints and attacks on rights.

While the nature of neoliberalism’s authoritarian variant has already attracted scholarly attention, particularly with reference to Global South cases (Arsel et al., 2021; Stubbs and Lendvai-Bainton, 2019; Scheiring, 2021; Wood, 2017; Bruff and Tansel, 2019), what has received far less attention is the varied ways in which the global ascendency of anti-democratic variants of neoliberalism might be linked to the terrain of urban development, governance, policy and planning. From research which examined the geographies of the recent populist wave (Ivaldi, 2015; Rodriguez-Pose et al., 2021; Ulrich-Shad and Duncan, 2021) to those that charted authoritarian configurations in urban governance (Ergenc and Yuksekkaya, 2022, Özatağan and Eraydin, 2021), environmental governance (Gilley, 2012; McCarthy, 2019; Wilson, 2019) and spatial planning (Fearn and Davoudi, 2021; Penny, 2017), and to scholarship into its links to contestation and dissent (Bond et al., 2019; Eraydin and Tasan-Kok, 2014; Scoones et al., 2021), emerging lines of research suggest that the authoritarian/illiberal reconfiguration of neoliberal capitalism raises fundamental questions about urban/regional futures.

This special issue builds on the successes of a double session at the RGS/IGB conference in Newcastle upon Tyne. The sessions opened a renewed dialogue between North, South, East, and West scholars to depict changes in development processes, policy, and governance. The session organisers now would like to extend this dialogue by proposing a special issue to Urban Studies with the aim to theoretically and empirically elucidate the variegated ways in which anti-democratic variants of neoliberalism are constituted in different contexts. To build on the geographical scope of the conference sessions, the special issue editors particularly encourage papers that engage with cases, which have hitherto been viewed as marginal to the study of authoritarianism/illiberalism, including case studies in South Asia, (South) America,  and Europe.  They also welcome submissions that invoke inter-disciplinary dialogues to theoretically and empirically address, but are not limited to, the following questions:

       What are the geographies, spaces, and scales in which anti-democratic variants of neoliberalism are embedded?

       What are the ways in which liberal market mechanisms are combined with authoritarian/illiberal governance? What is novel about its governance practices? Whose interests/narratives and included, whose are excluded?

       How does this authoritarian/illiberal wave connect to the wave of spatial planning deregulation?

       How are urban and regional futures planned under authoritarian/illiberal political configurations?

       What new forms do the configuration of spatial planning regulations and procedures take?

       What role does law play both in reconfiguring and regulating neoliberal policy and in activism?

       How are authoritarian/illiberal spatial development agendas competing with other agendas like climate change, social and environmental justice, sustainability?

       What role does law play both in reconfiguring and regulating spatial policy and in activism?

       What counter-movements or forms of resistance does the authoritarian/illiberal turn bring forth in reaction to it?

 

Timeline:

Abstract deadline: 21 November, 2022

Notification of decisions: 31 November, 2022

Submission of special proposal to Urban Studies: 30 January 2022

 

Please send your 150-word abstract including your contact details to:

Guldem Ozatagan, Newcastle University, guldem.ozatagan@newcastle.ac.uk

Ayda Eraydin, Middle East Technical University, ayda@metu.edu.tr

Gareth Fearn, Newcastle University, g.fearn@ucl.ac.uk

 

References

Aiyar, S.A. (2011) Neo-Illiberalism is India’s Bane. The Times of India. https://blogs.timesofindia.indiatimes.com/Swaminomics/neo-illiberalism-is-india-s-bane/. (17 July).

Aiyar, S.A. (2016) Twenty-five years of Indian economic reform. Policy Anal. CATO Inst. 803, 1–24. https://object.cato.org/sites/cato.org/files/pubs/pdf/pa803.pdf. (26 October)

Arsel, M., Adaman, F. and Saad-Filho, A. (2021) Authoritarian developmentalism: the latest stage of neoliberalism?, Geoforum, 124: 261-266.

Bello, W. (2018) Counterrevolution, the countryside and the middle classes: Lessons from five countries, The Journal of Peasant Studies, 45 (1): 21-58.

Beeson, M. (2010) The coming of environmental authoritarianism, Environmental Politics, 19 (2): 276-294.

Bond, S., Diprose, G. and Thomas, A.C. (2019) Contesting deep sea oil: politicisation-depoliticisation-repoliticisation, EPC, 37 (3): 519-538.

Brown, W. (2018) 'Neoliberalism's Frankenstein: Authoritarian Freedom in Twenty-First Century “Democracies”', Critical Times, 1(1), pp. 60-79

Bruff, I & Tansel, C.B. (2019) Authoritarian neoliberalism: trajectories of knowledge production and praxis, Globalizations, 16:3, 233-244, DOI: 10.1080/14747731.2018.1502497

Ergenc, C. and Yuksekkaya, O. (2022) Institutionalising authoritarian urbanism and the centralisation of urban decision-making, Territory, Politics, Governance. https://doi.org/10.1080/21622671.2021.2020156

Eraydin, A. and Tasan-Kok, T. (2014) State response to contemporary urban movements in Turkey: A critical overview of state entrepreneurialism and authoritarian interventions. Antipode, 46(1), 110–129

Fearn, G.& Davoudi, S. (2021) From post-political to authoritarian planning in England, a crisis of legitimacy. Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers, 00, 1– 16. https://doi.org/10.1111/tran.12501

Fraser, N. (2017) The end of progressive neoliberalism, Dissent, January 2017.

Gilley, B. (2012) Authoritarian environmentalism and China’s response to climate change. Environmental Politics 21 (2):287–307.

Hall, S. (1985) 'Authoritarian Populism: A reply to Jessop et al', New Left Review, 1(151), pp. 115-124.

Hendrickse, R. (2019) Neo-illiberalism, Geoforum, 95: 169-172.

Ivaldi, G. ve Gombin, J. (2015) The Front National and the new politics of the rural in France, D. Strijker, G. Voerman and I.J. Terluin (ed.) Rural protest groups and populist political parties. Wageningen Academic Publishers. Chapter 11, sf. 243-263.

McCarthy, J. (Ed.) (2019) Environmental Governance in a Populist/Authoritarian Era. Routledge.

Özatağan, G. and Eraydin, G. (2021) Emerging Policy Responses in Shrinking Cities: Shifting Policy Agendas to Align with Growth Machine Politics, Environment and Planning A, 53 (5): 1096-1114.

Peck, J. and Theodore, N. (2019) Still Neoliberalism?, South Atlantic Quarterly, April: 245-265.

Penny, J. (2017) Between coercion and consent: the politics of “cooperative governance” at a time of “austerity localism” in London, Urban Geography, 38 (9): 1352-1373.

Rodríguez-Pose, A., Lee, N. and Lipp, C. (2021) Golfing with Trump. Social capital, decline, inequality, and the rise of populism in the US, Cambridge Journal of Regions, Economy and Society. https://doi.org/10.1093/cjres/rsab026

Scheiring, G. (2021) Dependent development and authoritarian state capitalism: democratic backsliding and the rise of accumulative state in Hungary, Geoforum, 124: 267-278.

Scoones, I., Edelman, M., Borras Jr., S., Forero, L.F., Hall, R., Wolford, W. and White, B. (2021) Authoritarian Populism and the Rural World, Routledge.

Stubbs, P. and Lendvai-Bainton, N. (2019) Authoritarian neoliberalism, radical conservatism and social policy within the European Union: Croatia, Hungary and Poland, Development and Change, 51 (2): 540-560.

Ulrich-Shad, J.D. and Duncan, C.M. (2018) People and places left behind: work, culture and politics in the rural United States, The Journal of Peasant Studies, 45: 59-79.

Wilson, R. (2019) Authoritarian environmental governance: insights from the past century, Annals of the American Association of Geographers, 109 (2): 314-323.

Wednesday 1 November 2017

Fostering Resilient Mining Towns



                 Photo: Coal Mine in Çatalağzı, Zonguldak. Own archive, 2014.

    There has been a massive wave of energy and mining investments all over the world linked to the growth of construction, infrastructure and manufacturing sectors. Worldwide production of raw materials such copper, iron, aluminium grew by more than 40% in just 10 years from 1995 to 2005 (Arboleda, 2016), accompanied by remarkable and continuous rise in commodity prices since 2000 and quick recovery after the 2008 financial crisis. 

    Energy and mining have also been high on the agenda of Turkey’s politics since 2002. Coal has a significant place in this agenda for stoking the country’s economy while at the same time decreasing its dependence on Russian gas (Carrington, 2015). With 38 coal plants in operation and 80 planned, the scale is jawdropping. 

    Despite this coal rush, however, Zonguldak-the coal town of the country which hosts the country’s first coal power plant opened 70 years ago-has been experiencing a process of deindustrialisation and urban shrinkage since the late 1980s. And like many other shrinking cities across the world, Zonguldak has been continuously prone to rapidly changing circumstances of the global economy. 

    So, what are the dynamics behind Zonguldak’s deindustrialisation and shrinkage? And what enables Zonguldak and cities alike to adapt, transform and thrive in the face of often dramatically changing conditions? These are the questions which guide my recent research that I undertake as part of an ERA-NET project entitled “3S RECIPE: Smart Shrinkage Solutions – Fostering Resilient Cities in Inner Peripheries of Europe”. We work together with urban practitioners and policy makers to identify a) what works in a shrinking city context, and b) how the underlying forces of urban shrinkage can be reversed in order to convert these cities into sustainable, liveable, and economically resilient urban environments. For further details see: http://jpi-urbaneurope.eu/project/3s-recipe/

Arboleda, M. (2016) Spaces of extraction, metropolitan explosions: Planetary urbanisation and the commodity boom in Latin America, IJURR, 40 (1): 96-112.

Carrington, D. (2015) Is it too late to stop Turkey's coal rush? https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2015/aug/06/is-it-too-late-to-stop-turkeys-coal-rush.