Globalisation as Reterritorialisation: The Re-scaling of Urban Governance in the European Union

Author:

Brenner Neil1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Political Science, University of Chicago, 5828 S. University Avenue, Chicago, IL 60637, USA,

Abstract

In the rapidly growing literatures on globalisation, many authors have emphasised the apparent disembedding of social relations from their local-territorial pre-conditions. However, such arguments neglect the relatively fixed and immobile forms of territorial organisation upon which the current round of globalisation is premised, such as urban-regional agglomerations and territorial states. This article argues that processes of reterritorialisation—the reconfiguration and re-scaling of forms of territorial organisation such as cities and states—constitute an intrinsic moment of the current round of globalisation. Globalisation is conceived here as a reterritorialisation of both socioeconomic and political-institutional spaces that unfolds simultaneously upon multiple, superimposed geographical scales. The territorial organisation of contemporary urban spaces and state institutions must be viewed at once as a presupposition, a medium and an outcome of this highly conflictual dynamic of global spatial restructuring. On this basis, various dimensions of urban governance in contemporary Europe are analysed as expressions of a politics of scale that is emerging at the geographical interface between processes of urban restructuring and state territorial restructuring.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Urban Studies,Environmental Science (miscellaneous)

Reference114 articles.

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2. Altvater, E. (1992) Fordist and post-Fordist international division of labor and monetary regimes, in: M. STORPER and A. J. ScoTT (Eds) Pathways to Industrialization and Regional Development, pp. 21-45. New York: Routledge.

3. Neo-Marshallian Nodes in Global Networks

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