Urban redevelopment, governance and vulnerability: thirty years of ‘regeneration’ in Dublin

Over the last three decades, state intervention through urban regeneration has focused on ‘fixing’ perceived social and spatial vulnerabilities within particular neighbourhoods, communities or city spaces but has often generated new urban crises. Previous research examining regeneration over signif...

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Main Author: Niamh Moore-Cherry
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Asociación Española de Geografía 2020-12-01
Series:Boletín de la Asociación de Geógrafos Españoles
Subjects:
Online Access:https://bage.age-geografia.es/ojs/index.php/bage/article/view/3004
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spelling doaj-4d81d8599c2f4f9c9cc17a156d3601f92021-08-14T03:53:25ZengAsociación Española de GeografíaBoletín de la Asociación de Geógrafos Españoles0212-94262605-33222020-12-0187Urban redevelopment, governance and vulnerability: thirty years of ‘regeneration’ in DublinNiamh Moore-Cherry0University College Dublin Over the last three decades, state intervention through urban regeneration has focused on ‘fixing’ perceived social and spatial vulnerabilities within particular neighbourhoods, communities or city spaces but has often generated new urban crises. Previous research examining regeneration over significant periods of time in the UK and Ireland, suggests that often the same spaces and communities are subject to repeated rounds of intervention. In this paper, the thirty year trajectory of regeneration in Dublin Docklands is examined. The importance of global flows of capital and how they are mediated by local contexts, actors and institutions through roll-back, roll-out and roll-with-it forms of neoliberalisation are examined. Since the global financial crisis, neoliberal governmentalities have been more deeply embedded in place through new institutions and the formation of a new growth machine that has produced new vulnerabilities. Dublin Docklands has been successfully commodified and marketized through the sustenance, albeit changing, of a growth logic over more than 30 years. Yet significant challenges related to governance, social inclusion and spatial justice remain, and arguably have been (un-) intentionally co-produced in new forms by sustained rounds of state intervention. https://bage.age-geografia.es/ojs/index.php/bage/article/view/3004urban regenerationgovernanceneoliberal citiesentrepreneurial urban governancevulnerability
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Niamh Moore-Cherry
spellingShingle Niamh Moore-Cherry
Urban redevelopment, governance and vulnerability: thirty years of ‘regeneration’ in Dublin
Boletín de la Asociación de Geógrafos Españoles
urban regeneration
governance
neoliberal cities
entrepreneurial urban governance
vulnerability
author_facet Niamh Moore-Cherry
author_sort Niamh Moore-Cherry
title Urban redevelopment, governance and vulnerability: thirty years of ‘regeneration’ in Dublin
title_short Urban redevelopment, governance and vulnerability: thirty years of ‘regeneration’ in Dublin
title_full Urban redevelopment, governance and vulnerability: thirty years of ‘regeneration’ in Dublin
title_fullStr Urban redevelopment, governance and vulnerability: thirty years of ‘regeneration’ in Dublin
title_full_unstemmed Urban redevelopment, governance and vulnerability: thirty years of ‘regeneration’ in Dublin
title_sort urban redevelopment, governance and vulnerability: thirty years of ‘regeneration’ in dublin
publisher Asociación Española de Geografía
series Boletín de la Asociación de Geógrafos Españoles
issn 0212-9426
2605-3322
publishDate 2020-12-01
description Over the last three decades, state intervention through urban regeneration has focused on ‘fixing’ perceived social and spatial vulnerabilities within particular neighbourhoods, communities or city spaces but has often generated new urban crises. Previous research examining regeneration over significant periods of time in the UK and Ireland, suggests that often the same spaces and communities are subject to repeated rounds of intervention. In this paper, the thirty year trajectory of regeneration in Dublin Docklands is examined. The importance of global flows of capital and how they are mediated by local contexts, actors and institutions through roll-back, roll-out and roll-with-it forms of neoliberalisation are examined. Since the global financial crisis, neoliberal governmentalities have been more deeply embedded in place through new institutions and the formation of a new growth machine that has produced new vulnerabilities. Dublin Docklands has been successfully commodified and marketized through the sustenance, albeit changing, of a growth logic over more than 30 years. Yet significant challenges related to governance, social inclusion and spatial justice remain, and arguably have been (un-) intentionally co-produced in new forms by sustained rounds of state intervention.
topic urban regeneration
governance
neoliberal cities
entrepreneurial urban governance
vulnerability
url https://bage.age-geografia.es/ojs/index.php/bage/article/view/3004
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