Urban redevelopment, governance and vulnerability: thirty years of ‘regeneration’ in Dublin

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Niamh Moore-Cherry

Resumen

Reurbanización urbana, gobernanza y vulnerabilidad: treinta años de "regeneración" en Dublín


Durante las últimas tres décadas, la intervención estatal a través de la regeneración urbana se ha centrado en "arreglar" las vulnerabilidades sociales y espaciales percibidas dentro de vecindarios, comunidades o espacios urbanos particulares, pero a menudo ha generado nuevas crisis urbanas. Investigaciones anteriores que examinan la regeneración durante períodos de tiempo significativos en el Reino Unido e Irlanda, sugieren que a menudo los mismos espacios y comunidades están sujetos a repetidas rondas de intervención. En este artículo, se examina la trayectoria de treinta años de regeneración en Dublin Docklands y la importancia de los flujos globales de capital y cómo son mediados por contextos, actores e instituciones locales a través de la reversión, la implementación y la implementación, así como las formas de neoliberalización. Desde la crisis financiera global, las gubernamentaciones neoliberales se han arraigado más profundamente a través de nuevas instituciones y la formación de una nueva máquina de crecimiento que ha producido nuevas vulnerabilidades. Dublin Docklands se ha mercantilizado y comercializado con éxito gracias al sustento, aunque cambiante, de una lógica de crecimiento durante más de 30 años. Sin embargo, persisten desafíos importantes relacionados con la gobernanza, la inclusión social y la justicia espacial, y posiblemente se hayan coproducido (no) intencionalmente en nuevas formas mediante rondas continuas de intervención estatal.



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Moore-Cherry, N. (2020). Urban redevelopment, governance and vulnerability: thirty years of ‘regeneration’ in Dublin. Boletín De La Asociación De Geógrafos Españoles, (87). https://doi.org/10.21138/bage.3004

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