On the Spatiality of Segregation and the Governance of Change

This article presents segregation as a fundamental, longstanding, and widespread problem that impedes democratic urban life, and further, a problem that is intelligible from a critical geographic perspective. Ignorance is spatially produced by segregation at multiple scales, in places and across spa...

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Main Author: Nancy Ettlinger
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Université de Reims Champagne-Ardennes 2010-04-01
Series:L'Espace Politique
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/espacepolitique/1590
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spelling doaj-08478a7d01214d22854f4c73206501782020-11-24T23:10:04ZengUniversité de Reims Champagne-ArdennesL'Espace Politique1958-55002010-04-011010.4000/espacepolitique.1590On the Spatiality of Segregation and the Governance of ChangeNancy EttlingerThis article presents segregation as a fundamental, longstanding, and widespread problem that impedes democratic urban life, and further, a problem that is intelligible from a critical geographic perspective. Ignorance is spatially produced by segregation at multiple scales, in places and across space, thereby legitimizing and perpetuating silence about problems among marginalized groups. This spatialized understanding explains inequality along any of many axes of difference (not just class, as in conventional political economy perspectives). Understanding segregation in terms of the spatial production of ignorance prompts an agenda that forefronts the creation of new social knowledges. The focus here is on the everyday economy as a crucial but commonly overlooked context for developing such knowledges. I re-present a theory of knowledge creation developed for the pursuit of firm competitiveness and reconfigure it to mesh socio-political with economic goals, thereby dissolving an implicit binary that pervades academic scholarship.A central challenge is to change prevailing discourses that produce and reproduce ignorance by cultivating new practices that entail meaningful interaction among people otherwise segregated, namely the development of overlapping business networks constituted by diverse actors (by class, race/ethnicity). Efficiency becomes a means to social as well as economic ends, as respect and trust via collaborative experience (among people who might otherwise not interact) generate new social understandings. The possibilist framework developed here rests on the difficult coordination of processes operating at multiple scales.http://journals.openedition.org/espacepolitique/1590governancedemocratycitizen involvementurban spacepublic debateterritory
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Nancy Ettlinger
spellingShingle Nancy Ettlinger
On the Spatiality of Segregation and the Governance of Change
L'Espace Politique
governance
democraty
citizen involvement
urban space
public debate
territory
author_facet Nancy Ettlinger
author_sort Nancy Ettlinger
title On the Spatiality of Segregation and the Governance of Change
title_short On the Spatiality of Segregation and the Governance of Change
title_full On the Spatiality of Segregation and the Governance of Change
title_fullStr On the Spatiality of Segregation and the Governance of Change
title_full_unstemmed On the Spatiality of Segregation and the Governance of Change
title_sort on the spatiality of segregation and the governance of change
publisher Université de Reims Champagne-Ardennes
series L'Espace Politique
issn 1958-5500
publishDate 2010-04-01
description This article presents segregation as a fundamental, longstanding, and widespread problem that impedes democratic urban life, and further, a problem that is intelligible from a critical geographic perspective. Ignorance is spatially produced by segregation at multiple scales, in places and across space, thereby legitimizing and perpetuating silence about problems among marginalized groups. This spatialized understanding explains inequality along any of many axes of difference (not just class, as in conventional political economy perspectives). Understanding segregation in terms of the spatial production of ignorance prompts an agenda that forefronts the creation of new social knowledges. The focus here is on the everyday economy as a crucial but commonly overlooked context for developing such knowledges. I re-present a theory of knowledge creation developed for the pursuit of firm competitiveness and reconfigure it to mesh socio-political with economic goals, thereby dissolving an implicit binary that pervades academic scholarship.A central challenge is to change prevailing discourses that produce and reproduce ignorance by cultivating new practices that entail meaningful interaction among people otherwise segregated, namely the development of overlapping business networks constituted by diverse actors (by class, race/ethnicity). Efficiency becomes a means to social as well as economic ends, as respect and trust via collaborative experience (among people who might otherwise not interact) generate new social understandings. The possibilist framework developed here rests on the difficult coordination of processes operating at multiple scales.
topic governance
democraty
citizen involvement
urban space
public debate
territory
url http://journals.openedition.org/espacepolitique/1590
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