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Lecture 4: Governing the city: urban governance and regeneration

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Theorising the city in the global economy. The world according to GaWC ... The neutral state' as an arbiter. Visible and liberal policy-making process ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Lecture 4: Governing the city: urban governance and regeneration


1
Lecture 4Governing the city urban governance
and regeneration
  • Dr Steve Musson

2
Last week
  • Theorising the city in the global economy
  • The world according to GaWC
  • Group exercise cities in the world economy
  • London as a world city

3
This week
  • Theories of urban governance
  • Elitism
  • Pluralism
  • Neo-Marxist
  • From local government to governance
  • Partnership models of regeneration
  • The quango state
  • Incorporating business interests
  • Case study regenerating Manchester

4
Governing cities
  • Examining how cities are governed
  • Who makes decisions?
  • What systems of decision-making exist?
  • How are decisions made?
  • Who controls agendas and how?
  • Theoretical interpretations that answer these
    questions
  • The urban policy-making process

5
Theories of urban governance
  • Relationships between people, communities and
    decision-making agencies
  • Links between civil society and the state
  • The multi-faceted nature of the state
  • The dynamic nature of governance

6
Theories of urban governanceElitism
  • Stresses the power of a few well-organised
    interests (Wright-Mills 1960s)
  • Economic elites
  • Political elites
  • Bureaucratic elites
  • Technocratic elites
  • Hidden policy-making process

7
Theories of urban governance Pluralism
  • Dahl (1961)
  • A wide distribution of power
  • Competing groups and competing agendas
  • The neutral state as an arbiter
  • Visible and liberal policy-making process

8
Theories of urban governance Neo-Marxist
  • Harvey, Castells etc
  • Governance dominated by business interests
  • Competition, capitalism and the role of cities
  • Structured coherences and urban governance
  • Urban politics as a facade

9
Theories of urban governance
  • Strengths and weaknesses of competing
    perspectives
  • Pluralism, Elitism, Neo-Marxist
  • Complexity in urban governance
  • Exclusive categories?
  • Multiple rationalities in time and space
  • One key issue of power

10
The fragmentation of urban governance
  • Shifts from
  • Urban Government
  • to
  • Urban Governance

11
The fragmentation of urban governance
  • Examining the fragmentation of local governance
  • The growth of non-elected bodies
  • Examining the extent of decentralisation or
    recentralisation
  • Issues of accountability and democracy

12
Key questions
  • To what extent has there been continuity and
    change in local governance?
  • Characterising the shift from local government to
    governance
  • What are the impacts on policy effectiveness
    associated with this shift?
  • What are the wider democratic implications?

13
Traditional role of local government
  • A growth in local government responsibilities in
    the 20th century
  • Functional
  • Political
  • Servicing the welfare state
  • Creation of a 2-tier system in 1973-1974
  • Reorganisation in 1995-1996
  • Effectiveness of local government

14
Shift to local governance
  • Shifting responsibilities at the local level
  • The rise of non-elected local government
  • Rationale for reducing the role of local
    authorities
  • Functional
  • Political
  • Ideological
  • Fragmented local governance and the rise of the
    quango state

15
Defining quangos
  • Quasi-Autonomous Non-Governmental Organisations
  • At least 4 types of quangos
  • Distancing / independent (eg Audit Commission)
  • Co-opting external interest / expertise to advise
    (eg Arts Council)
  • Clearly defined task (eg Urban Development
    Corporations)
  • Distancing quasi-commercial activities from
    government control (eg Welsh Development Agency)

16
Quango responsibilities
  • 1,057 quangos in the UK
  • Administer around 23 billion per year
  • Scope and number has mushroomed since the late
    1970s

17
Implications
  • Lowering of standards of probity?
  • Narrow socio-economic background of appointees
  • New forms of fragmentation being created
  • Undermining authority of elected bodies
  • Accountability of service delivery
  • Reduced trust in government?

18
Traditions of business involvement
  • Victorian entrepreneurs
  • Local actors in national politics
  • Manchester Men
  • Use of private sector resources
  • Distrust of local government and the state
  • Belief in private sector forms of delivery

19
Creating the entrepreneurial city
  • Municipal socialism in UK cities
  • In response to Thatchers national politics
  • Local commitment to socialist politics
  • 1987 general election
  • The 1987 General Election defeat for Labour
    came as a bitter blow to Manchester City
    Council, whose prior strategy had been predicated
    upon an incoming Labour government not only
    meeting the council budget shortfalls but also
    validating its political-economic strategy
    (Tickell and Peck 1996)

20
Creating the entrepreneurial city
  • Shift in city politics following 1987 election
    around key individuals like Graham Stringer and
    Howard Bernstein
  • From municipal socialism to open for business
  • City aiming to work more closely with business
    interests
  • For example Olympic bids in 1990s

21
Creating the entrepreneurial city
  • IRA bomb in June 1996
  • A whole area of the city centre destroyed by
    3,300lb bomb in lorry
  • 200 people injured, but nobody killed
  • Central government money made available to help
    with rebuilding at a cost of 1.2bn
  • Crucially, partnerships and connections already
    in place to facilitate rapid development

22
Conclusion
  • Urban governance theorised in different ways
    although actual existing government is more
    complex and contradictory
  • Shift from government to governance
  • Associated with a redefining of the local state
    and the incorporation of wider interests
  • As seen in Manchester

23
Suggestions for further reading
  • Cochrane, A, Peck, J and Tickell, A (1996)
    Manchester plays games exploring the local
    politics of globalisation, Urban Studies 33,
    1319-1336
  • Harding, A, Wilks-Hegg, S and Hutchings, M
    (2000) Business, government and the business of
    urban governance, Urban Studies 37, 975-994
  • Harvey, D (1989) From managerialism to
    entrepreneurialism the transformation of urban
    governance in late capitalism, Geografiska
    Annaler 71, 4-17
  • Imrie, R and Raco, M (1999) How new is the new
    local governance? Lessons from the UK,
    Transactions of the Institute of British
    Geographers 24, 45-63
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