Ciência_Iscte
Publications
Publication Detailed Description
Journal Title
Geography Compass
Year (definitive publication)
2012
Language
English
Country
United States of America
More Information
Web of Science®
This publication is not indexed in Web of Science®
Scopus
Google Scholar
This publication is not indexed in Google Scholar
This publication is not indexed in Overton
Abstract
This article aims at providing a review of various streams of literature dealing with the spatial fragmentation of cities. In the last two decades many different contributions emphasized the growing fragmentation of the urban environment; the idea of "divided city" covers a multiplicity of approaches, methodologies and field of research. Still, the "divided city" literature tends to elevate a small number of cities to paradigmatic examples and to focus on abstract categories based on single factor explanations of urban fragmentation. The article, while accepting the hypothesis that the urban context is increasingly fragmented, argues that systems of coordinates - more than a taxonomy or a hierarchy - is needed to make sense of this phenomenon and draw significan comparison between cities. The article also maintains that a significant angle to look at urban polarization relates to the configuration of urban governance and political power. The article therefore considers three main areas connected to the distinction between polity, politics, and policy - and the three corresponding ideal-types of partitioned, contested and discrete city - where the conflict focuses respectively on the jurisdictional shape of governance, the degrees and venues of access to decision-making, and frame and contents of public policies.
Acknowledgements
--
Keywords
Fields of Science and Technology Classification
- Earth and related Environmental Sciences - Natural Sciences
- Other Social Sciences - Social Sciences
Português