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Announcing the winner of the International Award for Excellence

Congratulations to Nick Dunn the winner of the International Award for Excellence in the area of urban and extra urban studies with his paper Infrastructural Urbanism: Ecologies and Technologies of Multi-layered Landscapes.

Abstract: A number of current hypotheses concern the effect of new means of communication particularly Internet-hosted networks and digital spaces on the experience of urban place, often referred to as the ‘network city’. Via the digital networking of spatially distant people, the new urban society is frequently illustrated as one where the physical basis of sociability is declining in favour of dematerialized, delocalized, far-ranging systems and networks. However, this may not actually be as recent a phenomenon as it first appears, as Melvin Webber described in his highly influential article “The Urban Place and the Nonplace Urban Realm” of 1964, urban life and urban experience were always synonymous with a partial dissociation from the constraints of locality. The prevalence of technology in daily transactions and relationships leads to a rich geography, yet inequalities continue to prevail in the ‘space of flows’ as coined by Manuel Castells. The mobility and connectivity of communities with niche interests may now be seen to have evolved ‘digital ecologies’ through their use of digital infrastructures that afford meaningful relationships. A key aspect of the position presented here is the use of such technology to develop instrumentality with which to facilitate ‘thick’ descriptions of digital networks and communities and contribute to our understanding of their spatiality. This paper therefore attempts to describe and explain this transformation and propose theoretical material to address some of the attendant issues.

Director of cities@manchester and Prof of Human Geography, Kevin Ward, to speak in Prato at Spaces and Flows Conference

Kevin Ward is Professor of Human Geography and Director of cities@manchester at the University of Manchester. He is one of the featured plenary speakers at the Spaces and Flows: Second International Conference on Urban and ExtraUrban Studies, 17-18 November 2011 at the Monash University Prato Centre, Prato, Italy.

He is a geographical political economist with interests in urban politics and policy, on the one hand, and work and employment on the other. His current work explores urban policies to see where they come from, how they travel, where they end up and what these journeys means for the cities the policies pass through. Theoretically, this involves rethinking what is meant by ‘the urban’ in urban politics, as elements of different places are assembled and reassembled to constitute particular ‘urban’ political realms. More…

Julie MacLeavy, Lecturer in Human Geography, to speak at Spaces and Flows Conference–Prato, Italy

Julie MacLeavy is a Lecturer in Human Geography at the University of Bristol, UK. She will present a plenary presentation at the Spaces and Flows: Second International Conference on Urban and ExtraUrban Studies, 17-18 November 2011 at Monash University Prato Centre, Prato, Italy.

In her research she aims to develop a ‘cultural political economy’ reading of state intervention and its geographies. This requires the application of methods, ideas and concepts drawn from the ‘cultural turn’ in the social sciences to investigate issues of ‘traditional’ political-economic concern, including labour market regulation, welfare provision and urban renewal. Her early work concentrated on how narratives of social exclusion had been consistently employed to legitimate temporary labour market attachments as a recurrent objective in welfare policies and participation in urban regeneration schemes in the UK. More…

Professor Edward Soja to Speak in Los Angeles at the 2010 Spaces and Flows Conference

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Professor Soja teaches in the Regional and International Development (RID) area of Urban Planning and also teaches courses in urban political economy and planning theory. After starting his academic career as a specialist on Africa, Dr. Soja has focused his research and writing over the past 20 years on urban restructuring in Los Angeles and more broadly on the critical study of cities and regions.   His wide-ranging studies of Los Angeles bring together traditional political economy approaches and recent trends in critical cultural studies.  Of particular interest to him is the way issues of class, race, gender, and sexuality intersect with what he calls the spatiality of social life, and with the new cultural politics of difference and identity that this generates.

In addition to his work on urban restructuring in Los Angeles, Dr. Soja continues to write on how social scientists and philosophers think about space and geography, especially in relation to how they think about time and history. His latest book brings these various research strands together in a comprehensive look at the geohistory of cities, from their earliest origins to the more recent development of what he calls the “postmetropolis.”  His policy interests are primarily involved with questions of regional development, planning and governance, and with the local effects of ethnic and cultural diversity in Los Angeles.

Space and Flows Conference – Accommodation now Available

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During the 2010 Spaces and Flows Conference, December 4-5 at UCLA, we’ve arranged a special conference accommodation rate for delegates. Stay, mingle and meet delegates at the Hotel Palomar Los Angeles-Westwood.

Some hotel amenities include:

  • Complimentary morning coffee and tea bar
  • Hosted evening wine hour in hotel’s living room
  • Amenities of home, including iron and ironing board, hairdryer, plush animal print bathrobes, lighted make-up and full-length mirrors
  • “Forgot It? We’ve Got It!” essential travel items

More amenities and booking information available on The Spaces and Flows Conference Accommodation webpage.