2016
DOI: 10.1177/0042098016651552
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Beyond sweat equity: Community organising beyond the Third Way

Abstract: This paper explores the ambivalent nature of community organisation as a response to a "crisis of authority" in post-industrial areas subject to urban regeneration. In the discourse of the Third Way, activism has been increasingly discursively framed as "participation", legitimizing a shift in welfare provision from the state onto civil society and a proliferation of conclude that the potential of this as a source of contestation depends on two dimensions of practice: (i) the development by activists of a crit… Show more

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Cited by 10 publications
(17 citation statements)
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“…Though there is an apparent ‘flattening’ of urban governing processes as exemplified by entrepreneurial forms of urban partnership (e.g. Watkins, 2017, this issue), these conceal new hierarchies, which in turn conceal power-dynamics. Against the dominant framing that ‘there is no alternative’ the ‘expertocratic’ technocracy determines who has access to governance arrangements and who does not.…”
Section: Diagnosing Urban Crisismentioning
confidence: 99%
See 3 more Smart Citations
“…Though there is an apparent ‘flattening’ of urban governing processes as exemplified by entrepreneurial forms of urban partnership (e.g. Watkins, 2017, this issue), these conceal new hierarchies, which in turn conceal power-dynamics. Against the dominant framing that ‘there is no alternative’ the ‘expertocratic’ technocracy determines who has access to governance arrangements and who does not.…”
Section: Diagnosing Urban Crisismentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Against the dominant framing that ‘there is no alternative’ the ‘expertocratic’ technocracy determines who has access to governance arrangements and who does not. In the UK, the urban quangocracy insulates policies and spending decisions from public scrutiny illustration (Watkins, 2017, this issue). These are powerful containment mechanisms.…”
Section: Diagnosing Urban Crisismentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…In Madrid (Martı´-Costa and Toma`s, 2016, this issue), Barcelona (Blanco and Leo´n, 2016, this issue), Detroit, Dallas, San Jose, Philadelphia (Hinkley, 2015, this issue), Athens (Arampatzi, 2016, this issue) and Nottingham (Watkins, 2016, this issue), we see not only the effects of austerity imposed as a result of the provision of state welfare for the irresponsible actions of the banking sector, but also a desire for alternatives. Common to these accounts is a continuing characterisation of the 'crazy quilts' of urban areas, but a belief among politicians and officials that these environments can be shaped through a 'will' embodied in formal policy, whilst more informal communitybased forms of innovation and solidarity remain below the radar of recognition.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%