Democracy and Urban Life

Year
1
Academic year
2019-2020
Code
02020673
Subject Area
Sociology/Economics/Geography/Political Sciences/Earth Sciences/Mechanical Engineering
Language of Instruction
English
Mode of Delivery
Face-to-face
Duration
SEMESTRIAL
ECTS Credits
7.5
Type
Elective
Level
2nd Cycle Studies - Mestrado

Recommended Prerequisites

Not applicable.

Teaching Methods

Students are expected to attend classes regularly (minimum of 75% of class attendance). Besides students are supposed to take part in group­discussions and to complete an individual essay (3,000 to 5,000 words). Along the way students, individually or collectively (two persons maximum), are asked to help lead two course discussions, and to make a couple of short oral presentation of readings assigned. Written short syntheses (400­800 words) of these presentations are to be handed over in time to accompany the presentations.

Learning Outcomes

Overall objectives

The study unit helps educate students on issues, problems and public policy questions related to unban life.

There are 5 major study purposes:

(i) to introduce students to major historical, political, economic and social dimensions of the urban phenomenon

(ii) to offer a broad view on the impact of democratic policies and processes in the quality of city governance

(iii) to provide methodological tools to analyze urban policies and their social impacts

(iv) to bring a broad understanding of current concepts of urban studies

(v) to lead students to the major critical issues relating democratic city life Specific objectives

The unit aims at:

(i) bringing global and “other” non­Western cities to the fore

(ii) looking at urban spaces as arenas of participatory democracy

(iii) discussing cityscapes in relation to multicultural urban rights

(iv) reading the city in the light of global competition and mega­events

(v) looking at special opportunities to enhance community

Work Placement(s)

No

Syllabus

­ The urbanization of the world: Accelerating the pace of change;

­ Concepts and theories of the modern city: Cityness and city making;

­ The Western urban canon and its critics: From Simmel to the Chicago School; from H. Lefebvre to S. Zukin; from D. Harvey to S. Sassen;

­ Global cities and Invisible cities: Democracy in “other” cities;

­ The city and the senses: Living the city, re­capturing the sensible;

­ Urban policies: The re­making of urban democracy or the re­birth of “the right to the city”;

­ Urban spaces/Rebel cities: The sociopolitical meaning of streets and the plazas. From Ground Zero to Tarhir.

­ Urban warfare and the multicultural urban world: Learning from Syria

­ The triumph of the city versus the ghostly city: Detroitism and the decay of city centers

­ The open city: Democracy, cosmopolis and the future urban world

Assessment Methods

Assessment
Periodic or by final exam as given in the course information: 100.0%

Bibliography

BLOOM, Clive Riot city. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2012.

CAUTER, Lieven de ­ The capsular civilization. Rotterdam: NAI Publishers, 2004.

DEGEN, Mónica ­ Sensing cities. London: Routledge, 2008.

ENDLESS (The) city. Ed. Ricky Burdett, Deyan Sudjic. London: Phaidon Press, 2007.

FORTUNA, Carlos ­ In praise of other views. Berlin: Instituto Ibero­Americano, 2012.

GRAHAM, Stephen ­ Cities under siege. London: Verso, 2011.

HARVEY, David ­ Rebel cities. London: Verso, 2012.

LANDRY, Charles ­ The art of city­making. London, Earthscan, 2007.

SASSEN, Saskia ­ Territory, authority, rights. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2006.

SEABROOK, Jeremy ­ Cities. London, Pluto Press, 2007.

SHORT, John R. ­ Urban theory. New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2006.

SPACES of Neoliberalism. Ed. Neil Brenner, Nik Theodore. Oxford: Blackwell, 2002.

TONKISS, Fran ­ Space, the city and social theory.Cambridge: Polity Press, 2013.

ZUKIN, Sharon ­ Naked city. Oxford, Oxford University Press, 2010.