The starting point of this book is the observation that there is a
discrepancy between the lived reality of human beings and the
fabricated, planned, and governed ‘reality’ of the state apparatus
at both the local and national level. The book posits multi-locality
as an emerging spatial configuration. The author draws from various
theoretical sources, such as Deleuze and Guattari’s concepts of
state or royal science, the Nietzschean critique of idealism,
Hägerstrnad’s time-geography, Hintikka’s theory of modalities,
Lefebvre’s urban society, Castel’s network society, Foucault’s
concept of heterotopia, and Bhaskar’s and Sartre's theories of
presence and absence. He also discusses the implications of Faludi’s
post-territorialist critique of planning and governance, and of the
failure to operationalise the concept quantitively, basing his
arguments in the lived experiences of multi-locals as well. The
novelty of the book is how it analyses multi-locality from such a wide
theoretical perspective: what is the nature and meaning of the
different multiple and coexistent places for people, and how is this
spatial transformation related to their mobility, everyday practices,
and work. How does the presence and absence of places form their
identity and their citizenship? He also addresses the inconsistency
between multi-locality and traditional statistics and the planning and
governance practices based on the assumption of unilocality and
discusses the implications of this incongruity. The book will be of
interest to scholars in urban studies and planning theory, as well as
practitioners developing more adequate practices replacing outdated
ones.
Les mer
The Power of Lifescapes
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781000572346
Publisert
2022
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
Taylor & Francis
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter