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Der vorliegende Handlungsleitfaden hilft zivilgesellschaftlichen Organisationen und staatlichen Einrichtungen bei der Installation eines anonymen Behandlungs- oder Krankenschein für Menschen ohne Krankenversicherung. Dabei bündelt sich hier der Erfahrungsschatz verschiedener Initiativen aus dem gesamten Bundesgebiet.
The Gated Community (GC) phenomenon in Latin American cities has become an inherent element of their urban development, despite academical debate, their approach thrives within the housing market; not surprisingly, as some of the premises on which GCs are based, namely safety, control and supervision intersperse seamlessly with the insecure conditions of the contexts from which they arise. The current security crisis in Mexico, triggered in 2006 by the so-called war on drugs, has reached its peak with the highest insecurity rates in decades, representing a unique chance to study these interactions. Although the leading term of this research, Urban Agoraphobia, implies a causal dichotomy between the rise in the sense of fear amongst citizens and housing confinement as lineal consequence, I acknowledge that GCs represent a complex phenomenon, a hub of diverse factors and multidimensional processes held on four fundamental levels: global, social, individual and state-related. The focus of this dissertation is set on the individual plane and contributes, from the analysis of the GC’s resident’s perspective, experiences and perceptions, to a debate that has usually been limited to the scrutiny of other drivers, disregarding the role of dweller’s underlying fears, motivations and concerns. Assuming that the current ruling security model in Mexico tends to empower its commodification rather than its collective quality, this research draws upon the use of a methodological triangulation, along conceptual and contextual analyses, to test the hypothesis that insecurity plays an increasingly major role, leading citizens into the belief that acquiring a household in a controlled and surveilled community represents a counterweight against the feared environment of the open city. The focus of the analysis lies on the internal hatch of community ties as potential palliative for the provision of a sense of security, aiming to transcend the unidimensional discourse of GCs as defined mainly by their defensive apparatus. Residents’ perspectives acquired through ethnographical analyses may provide the chance to gain an essential view into a phenomenon that further consolidates without a critical study of its actual implications, not only for Mexican cities, but also for the Latin American and global contexts.
Im Heft zum zehnjährigen Jubiläum von sub\urban mit dem Themenschwerpunkt „sub\x: Verortungen, Entortungen" veröffentlichen wir eine Debatte, die von den bisherigen in unserer Zeitschrift in dieser Rubrik geführten textlichen Diskussionen abweicht. Im Vorfeld der Planungen für unsere Jubiläumsausgabe haben wir die aktuellen Mitglieder unseres wissenschaftlichen Beirats darum gebeten, zwei grundlegende Fragen von kritischer Stadtforschung in kurzen Beiträgen zu diskutieren: Was ist Stadt? Was ist Kritik?
The thesis addresses journalistic, administrative and judicial historical documentation to analyze the links between aridity and geographical imaginaries in the province of Catamarca (Argentina), from a historical point of view. The research aims to contribute to the understanding of the "non-hegemonic" versions of Modernity, its territoriality and the productions of geographic imaginaries that they involve. To provide a broad purpose, it raises as an object of study the ways in which "modern" practices, actors, links, discourses and expectations about the territory are mobilized when they are located in a space in "other" water conditions. those that are intended to "civilize" it.
The general objective of the research is to analyze time-space controversies around water in the city and valley of Catamarca towards 19th and 20th centuries. The specific objectives derived are a) analyzing how various actors are related to waters behavior - in other words, the local water regime – in Catamarca and the meanings built around it. b) to analyze the controversies about the place of Catamarca and its water regime in the local and national geographic imaginary. c) analyze controversies in which the relationships between actors and materialities involved in modernization projects are put into discussion.
These concerns by the experience of the actors and by the historical-spatial imagination of the territory, combined, led to the construction of an interdisciplinary methodology based on tools from anthropology, sociology, geography and history.
Warum werden in aktuellen Diskussionen Wohnungsgenossenschaften immer wieder als zentrale Akteure einer gemeinwohlorientierten Wohnraumversorgung benannt – obwohl sie kaum zur Schaffung neuen bezahlbaren Wohnraums beitragen? Warum wehrt sich die Mehrzahl der Wohnungsgenossenschaften mit Händen und Füßen gegen die Wiedereinführung eines Gesetzes zur Wohnungsgemeinnützigkeit, obwohl es doch gerade dieses Gesetz war, dass sie im 20. Jahrhundert zu im internationalen Vergleich großen Unternehmen wachsen ließ? Sind Wohnungsgenossenschaften nun klientilistische, wenig demokratische und nur halb dekommodifizierte Marktteilnehmer oder wichtiger Teil der Wohnungsversorgung der unteren Mittelschicht? Wer Antworten auf diese und andere Fragen sucht und Differenziertheit in ihrer Beantwortung aushält, lese Joscha Metzers Dissertation „Genossenschaften und die Wohnungsfrage.
Im ersten Working Paper des Forschungsprojekts „Städtische Ko-Produktion von Teilhabe und Gemeinwohl. Aushandlungsprozesse zwischen zivilgesellschaft lichen Akteuren und kommunalen Verwaltungen“ möchten wir die von uns verwendeten zentralen Begrifflichkeiten definieren sowie einige Grundannahmen erläutern. Im Anschluss an Definitionen der Begriff e Wohlfahrtsregime, Teilhabe, Gemeinwohl, Governance, Zivilgesellschaft und soziale Bewegungen erfolgt eine Analyse der heutigen Krise von Teilhabe, die wir als Ausgangspunkt zur Untersuchung unserer Fallstudien definieren.
Das Working Paper dient sowohl der internen Selbstverständigung im Projekt als auch dem Austausch mit anderen Forschenden in der Förderlinie „Teilhabe und Gemeinwohl“ des Bundesministeriums für Bildung und Forschung (BMBF) sowie darüber hinaus mit Projekten, die sich ähnlichen Themen widmen.
Stadtpolitik für alle
(2021)
Die Corona-Krise hat die Erosion städtischer Solidarität offen zu Tage treten lassen. Dagegen bringen Anton Brokow-Loga und Frank Eckardt in dieser Schrift die praktische Utopie einer solidarischen Postwachstumsstadt „auf den Punkt“.
Vom Commoning über die Umverteilung der städtischen Flächen bis zu einer sozial-ökologischen Verkehrswende: Eine progressive Stadtpolitik für alle überwindet bisheriges Schubladendenken. Sie setzt stattdessen auf heterogene Zusammenhänge und ungewöhnliche Bündnisse. Zu dem hier umrissenen Vorhaben gehört auch, eine basisdemokratisch orientierte Stadtpolitik mit dem Ziel einer umfassenden Transformation von Stadt und Gesellschaft zu verknüpfen.
Wie kann ein Blick auf die kommunale Ebene helfen, globalen Ungerechtigkeiten zu begegnen? Welchen Weg weisen munizipalistische Plattformen und Vergemeinschaftungen jenseits von Privat- oder Staatseigentum?
Why isn't Google welcome in Kreuzberg? Social movement and the effects of Internet on urban space
(2020)
Advances in information and communication technologies such as the Internet have driven a great transformation in the interactions between individuals and the urban environment. As the use of the Internet in cities becomes more intense and diverse, there is also a restructuring of urban space, which is experienced by groups in society in various ways, according to the specificity of each context. Accordingly, large Internet companies have emerged as new players in the processes of urbanization, either through partnerships with the public administration or through various services offered directly to urban residents. Once these corporations are key actors in the digitalization of urban services, their operations can affect the patterns of urban inequality and generate a series of new struggles over the production of space. Interested in analyzing this phenomena from the perspective of civil society, the present Master Thesis examined a social movement that prevented Google to settle a new startup campus in the district of Kreuzberg, in Berlin. By asking why Google was not welcome in that context, this study also sought to understand how internet, as well as its main operators, has affected everyday life in the city. Thus, besides analyzing the movement, I investigated the particularities of the urban context where it arose and the elements that distinguish the mobilization’s opponent. In pursuit of an interdisciplinary approach, I analyzed and discussed the results of empirical research in dialogue with critical theories in the fields of urban studies and the Internet, with emphasis on Castells' definitions of urban social movements and network society (1983, 2009, 2015), Couldry's and Mejias' (2019) idea of data colonialism, Lefèbvre's (1991, 1996) concepts of abstract space and the right to the city, as well as Zuboff's (2019) theory of surveillance capitalism. The case at hand has exposed that Google plays a prominent role in the way the Internet has been developed and deployed in cities. From the perspective accessed, the current appropriation of Internet technologies has been detrimental to individual autonomy and has contributed to intensifying existing inequalities in the city. The alternative vision to this relies mainly on the promotion of decentralized solidarity networks.
The thesis concerns a work of urban history intended not to describe the city but rather to interpret it. By doing so, I have interpreted the city by means of the role played by the so-called ‘great property’ in the European city-making process during the last three decades of the 20th century, specifically focused on the concrete case of military properties in Italy. I have also considered the role played by other kinds of great properties, i.e. industries and railway, which previously acted in the production of the built environment in a different way respect to the military one. As all of them have as common denominator the fact of being ‘capital in land’, I analysed great industrial and railway properties in order to extrapolate a methodology which helped me to interpret the relationship between military properties and city-making process in Europe in the late 20th century.
I have analysed the relationship between the capital in land and the city-making process on the ground of the understanding the interrelation between the great property, the urban development, and the agents involved in the urban and territorial planning. Here I have showed that urban planning is not the decisive factor influencing the citymaking process, but instead the power held by the capital in land. I have found that is the great property the trigger of the creation of new ‘areas of centrality’ intended as large areas for consumerism. As far as the role played by great property is concerned, I have also discovered that it has evolved over time. Originally, industrial and railway properties have been regenerated into a wide range of new profit-driven spaces; successively, I have found out that most of the regeneration of military premises aimed to materialise areas of centrality. The way of interpreting this factor has been based on focusing my attention on the military premises in Italy: I have classified their typology when they have been built and, most importantly, when they have been regenerated into new areas of centrality.
Seit 50 Jahren wird über Erklärungsansätze für Gentrifizierung gestritten. Sehr viel länger schon wandert anlagesuchendes Kapital von einem
Ort zum anderen und hinterlässt dabei Investitionsruinen einerseits und Menschen, die durch Verdrängung ihr Zuhause verlieren, andererseits. Sehr viel kürzer erst wird der Begriff Gentrifizierung hier und da von sozialen Bewegungen aufgegriffen, die sich mit letzterem Phänomen auseinandersetzen.
In diesem Beitrag soll es nicht um die wissenschaftliche Debatte um Erklärungsansätze für Gentrifizierung und auch nicht um die wissenschaftliche Relevanz des Begriffes gehen, sondern um seine Rolle und Funktion in sozialen Bewegungen.