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Planum Events 06.2014 </br> Urban Austerity: Impacts of the global financial crisis on cities in Europe </br> Bauhaus-Universität Weimar - CALL FOR PAPERS DEADLINE | 31st july, 2014

4 December 2014 – 5 December 2014

International Conference
URBAN AUSTERITY:
Impacts of the global financial crisis on cities in Europe
CALL FOR PAPERS

Weimar, Germany
DEADLINE CLOSED | July 31st, 2014
IfEU - Institute for European Urban Studies, Bauhaus University Weimar
 HHS - Hermann Henselman Foundation

The international conference “Urban Austerity: Impacts of the global financial crisis on cities in Europe” will be hosted by the Institute for European Urban Studies at Bauhaus-Universität Weimar from Thursday 4th December to Friday 5th December 2014.  The conference seeks to promote an interdisciplinary debate that discusses regulatory restructurings under a new regime of austerity urbanism and reflects on the role of urban social movements struggling for progressive alternatives.

In the first part of the conference we will bring in academics, practitioners, and political activists from Greece to share their research and experiences. In the second part, we will invite contributions from established academics, early career researchers, graduate students, critical governors, and political activists on a broad range of urban topics focused on but not limited to the regions most affected in Southern and Southeastern Europe.




THE THEME
What started as a mortgage crisis in 2007 and became a global financial and economic crisis in 2008 has been transformed into a sovereign debt crisis since 2010. In all of these interwoven phases, cities have been, in multiple ways, at the heart of the turmoil. The conference seeks to promote an interdisciplinary debate that exposes actual urban problems in their spatiotemporal dimensions, discusses regulatory restructurings under a new regime of austerity urbanism, and reflects on the role of urban social movements struggling for progressive alternatives. In the first part of the conference we will bring in academics, practitioners, and political activists from Greece to share their research and experiences. In the second part, we will invite contributions from established academics, early career researchers, graduate students, critical governors, and political activists on a broad range of urban topics focused on but not limited to the regions most affected in Southern and Southeastern Europe. The enduring economic crisis itself and the “fiscal dictatorship” (Lehndorff 2012) imposed in the following years by German and European elites have affected urban regions dramatically as indebted home-owner have been evicted, masses of people impoverished, public budgets squeezed, municipal infrastructures privatized, public services downsized, and, above all, austerity measures implemented. Therefore, we strongly encourage contributions, both single and comparative case studies focusing on one of the following panels, that discuss the various and uneven impacts of the crisis on European urban cities and regions.

We invite all those focusing on urban research to apply for the conference and explicitly invite also researchers with a disciplinary background in urban planning, urban design or architecture to participate in the conference. 

CONFERENCE PANELS 
PANEL 1 | “Urban austerity”
We are especially interested in papers dealing with the impacts of the new regime of austerity established in the aftermath of the crisis. How are different urban regions affected by the slump and the following crisis management? Is austerity “a new operational matrix for urban politics” (Peck 2012)? How do urban governments drive, manage or subvert austerity?
PANEL 2 | “Housing crisis”
As all began with a deeply troubled subprime mortgage market in the US (Gotham 2009; Schwartz 2012) and housing price bubbles bursting also in a variety of European real estate markets (Martin 2011), we invite papers discussing the contemporary housing crisis. 
PANEL 3 | “Urban governance and planning”
Nowadays confronted with a further wave of austerity urbanism, local politicians and urban managers look once again for new strategies to cope with the intensified contradiction between shrinking resources on the one side and the need to guarantee social cohesion and control on the other one. Hence, we warmly welcome proposals discussing for instance how urban governors respond to the crisis in diverse European regions?  How do cities govern the economic crisis and what new regulatory restructurings are emerging?
PANEL 4 “Urban conflicts and contestations”
In recent years, cities have increasingly become central places where social movements mobilize to contest the politics of austerity, the gentrification or degeneration of their neighborhoods, the private concentration of profits and assets, and the part and parcel of everyday capitalism. We would like to address questions like: What is the role of cities and urban societies in fostering resistance to the depredations of crisis?  What is the potential for envisioning and enacting post-neoliberal urbanisms? 
PANEL 5 | “Uneven socio-spatial developments”
Albeit striking is the uneven development of the crisis which leaves urban regions in Northern Europe relatively unaffected while regions in Southern Europe have particularly become the epicenter of mass impoverishment (Aalbers 2009; Hadjimichalis 2011). Thus, we cordially invite theoretical and empirical proposals that analyze and discuss the uneven development of the crisis.
PANEL 6 “Urban infrastructure and public services”
Following up on this, we would like to discuss in this panel the specific effects the crisis has taken on the organization, distribution and quality of urban infrastructure and public services. Here we look for papers that discuss this in the context of general trends of privatization, fragmentation and cut downs of services that have been going on throughout the last decades.

APPLICATION
DEADLINE | July 31st, 2014
Paper abstract must be sent to:
• Sebastian Schipper |
sebastian.schipper@uni-weimar.de 
 
 Barbara Schönig | barbara.schoenig@uni-weimar.de  

REGISTRATION AND FEES
The online registration will begin in August/September 2014. The conference fee will be less than 50€. We can offer limited travel subsidies to those lacking conference funding, especially from South and Southeastern Europe. Please state also whether you require financial assistance in your application.

INFO & CONTACTS 
Website: Urban Austerity conference website
Email: sebastian.schipper@uni-weimar.de (Sebastian Schipper)


Event schedule:

  • Start: 12-04-2014
  • End: 12-05-2014.