Coordinatore | UNIVERSIDAD AUTONOMA DE MADRID
Organization address
address: CALLE EINSTEIN, CIUDAD UNIV CANTOBLANCO RECTORADO 3 contact info |
Nazionalità Coordinatore | Spain [ES] |
Totale costo | 793˙800 € |
EC contributo | 793˙800 € |
Programma | FP7-PEOPLE
Specific programme "People" implementing the Seventh Framework Programme of the European Community for research, technological development and demonstration activities (2007 to 2013) |
Code Call | FP7-PEOPLE-2012-IRSES |
Funding Scheme | MC-IRSES |
Anno di inizio | 2012 |
Periodo (anno-mese-giorno) | 2012-10-01 - 2016-09-30 |
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1 |
UNIVERSIDAD AUTONOMA DE MADRID
Organization address
address: CALLE EINSTEIN, CIUDAD UNIV CANTOBLANCO RECTORADO 3 contact info |
ES (MADRID) | coordinator | 533˙400.00 |
2 |
UNIVERSITY OF LEEDS
Organization address
address: WOODHOUSE LANE contact info |
UK (LEEDS) | participant | 260˙400.00 |
Esplora la "nuvola delle parole (Word Cloud) per avere un'idea di massima del progetto.
'Neoliberal ideologies applied in city politics can be portrayed as key aspects for the progressive and often conflictive transformations of urban space today. Such transformations do not exclusively apply to the political sphere – neoliberalism has also affected the habits of how people imagine, perceive and appropriate urban spaces in their daily life. Cities play a strategic role in the variegated geographies of neoliberalism, but relatively little research critically assessed the challenges citizenship faces in neoliberal societies. The interdisciplinary exchange programme CONTESTED_CITIES will tackle this gap – it investigates the discourses and practices of contest and re-appropriation of urban space, thus providing a novel understanding of how opposition against neoliberal urban development is being re-framed in the course of the current financial and economic crisis. It will bring together scientists from European and Latin American universities to discuss some of the striking consequences of urban neoliberalism and the resistance originated in different geographical backgrounds. By applying innovative qualitative methodologies such as reflexive photography and other visual accounts, the project aims at providing theoretical advances within citizenship studies and urban geography as well as at producing new empirical insights to the consequences of recent urban policies. Within an interdisciplinary network to analyse and compare urban policies, gentrification and contestation in Europe and Latin America, the exchange programme creates additionally the conditions to introduce policy transfer by learning from Latin American cities - which have experienced for decades urban conflict and highly innovative urban solutions - as laboratories of social change, and to create a theoretical background that overcomes existing lacunas between urban debates in the English, and the Spanish and Portuguese-speaking literature.'
An EU study is investigating the effects of neoliberal policies on local Latin American communities. Using innovative methods, the project investigates gentrification, land conflicts and housing availability, while also fostering knowledge exchange.
Neoliberalism is a political ideology advocating limited government intervention, privatisation, deregulation and low government spending, so as to benefit the private sector. When applied to local politics, the ideology can result in conflict, yet little is known about the challenges citizens face under such policies.
The EU-funded project http://www.contested-cities.net (CONTESTED_CITIES) (Contested spatialities of urban neoliberalism: Dialogues between emerging spaces of citizenship in Europe and Latin America) aims to investigate. The two-member consortium reviews research on the processes of gentrification in Europe and Latin America. The study also examines conflict in neoliberal urban politics regarding re-appropriation of land, emphasising the struggle for adequate housing and rights to the city.
One research technique involves innovative qualitative methodologies such as reflexive photography. Additionally, the project fosters a knowledge exchange programme, intended to learn from Latin American cities and result in policy transfer. The project runs for four years to late 2016.
Results from the first reporting period have been detailed, in Spanish, on the project's website.
The project is expected to yield a new understanding of opposition to neoliberal urban development. The results will also reflect developments in the current financial crisis.