Cities Rethought
A New Urban Disposition
1. Auflage November 2024
200 Seiten, Softcover
Wiley & Sons Ltd
In a world of disruptions and seemingly endless complexity, cities have become central to thinking about the future of humanity. Yet the study of cities is fragmented among different silos of expertise, diverse genres of scholarship, and widening chasms between theory and practice. How can we do better?
Cities Rethought suggests that we need to remake the way we see and know cities in order to rethink how we act and intervene within them. To this end, it offers the contours of a new urban disposition. Its normative, analytical, and operational elements offer an opportunity for scholars, practitioners, and citizens alike to approach the complexity of cities anew.
Written collectively for a wide audience, the text draws from cities across the global north and south, speaks across diverse genres of ideas, and reflects on the lived experience of the authors as both researchers and practitioners. It is an essential text for anyone committed to knowing their own cities as well as finding ways to meaningfully intervene in them.
1 An Urban Disposition
Dear Reader
Three elements
Putting the three together
How to read this book
And so
2 Normative Locations
What is the fabric of the city?
How do you consume a deleted future?
What kind of fight can you pick in the city?
What is the urbanity of the state?
What evidence matters for cities?
Taking stock
3 Analytical Redescriptions
Choosing our puzzles
Improving an estate
Upstream of the river
Repairing patchworks
The propensity of lychees
Spaces across the aisle
Amidst the numbers
Taking stock
4 Operational Moves
Mapping the operational ecosystem
Modalities of change in systems
Sensing a pulse
Evaluating our moves
Moving an idea within a system
Building a social imagination
A life in practice
A Parting Note
Teresa Caldeira, University of California, Berkeley
"This is not just another book about cities, it is about something much deeper and fundamental to reflections on ourselves as humans, our history, values, and uncertain future. I recommend this book not only to urbanists and scholars in various academic fields, but to everyone interested in the endeavour of humanity in our deeply troubled, conflicted times."
Thomas Elmqvist, Stockholm University
"This book is an extraordinary compass with which to navigate cities when they have never been more central to the future of humanity. A bridge between disciplines, geographies, and traditions, it opens up paths, stimulates curiosity, and brings together knowledges and publics so that we can creatively rethink cities and fall in love with them again."
Judit Carrera, Director of the Barcelona Centre for Contemporary Culture
"Reading this book is like being admitted into a fascinating conversation between some of today's most engaged and inspiring urban thinkers. Their rich stories and deep reflections will encourage new sensibilities and ways of thinking by scholar-activists in cities around the world."
David Dodman, General Director of the Institute for Housing and Urban Development Studies (IHS), Rotterdam
"The endless journey for an equitable city demands a continuous process of learning, adaptation, and innovation, to imagine alternative paths to the usual responses. In this text, the authors build an analytical and practical roadmap that will allow us to draw a journey with greater clarity and certainty to improve our lives in cities."
Alejandro Echeverri, TEC Monterrey Institute of Technology
"This book invites us to cast aside what we know and critically reflect on emerging notions of "the urban". It enables us to embrace concepts, practices, and materialities of the urban milieu in ways that go beyond the mundane."
Taibat Lawanson, University of Lagos
"A breath of fresh air. A repertoire of ways of thinking and acting in the city, and a provocative resource from which to develop our own routes to serving our cities. Cities Rethought inspires while remaining rooted in the rhythms of urban life, the realities of setbacks and frustrations amidst the possibilities, and the practicalities of big and small gains."
Colin McFarlane, Durham University
"Four globally leading scholars at the top of their fields harness vast swathes of theory and practical wisdom to provide an insightful, well-reasoned, reflective, inspiring, accessible, and empirically grounded tour de force which will shape urban knowledge production, policy, and practice for years to come - a rare and welcome thing indeed. This book punches way beyond urban studies and establishes itself as a must-read for everyone interested in how to live in a fractured and fragile urban world."
Beth Perry, Director of the Urban Institute, University of Sheffield
"This generous and deeply thoughtful book shows us the active work of thinking the city that is part of any serious project for changing it: work that is collaborative, critical, committed, and inventive."
Fran Tonkiss, London School of Economics and Political Science
"This book is a political intervention that is as inventive as it is provocative. It creates new ways of imagining and acting for those who live, work, and struggle in cities. Don't let it lie there. Get it!"
Eyal Weizman, Founding Director of Forensic Architecture
Michael Keith is Director of PEAK Urban and the Centre on Migration Policy and Society at the University of Oxford.
Susan Parnell is Professor of Human Geography at the University of Bristol and Emeritus Professor at the University of Cape Town.
Edgar Pieterse is Professor and Founding Director of the African Centre for Cities at the University of Cape Town.