Cities as spaces of democracy: Complexity, scale, and governance

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Abstract

It's easy to view cities as actual or potential spaces of democracy. Cities are central to the everyday experiences of much of the world's population, and are also favoured objects of study that connect geography with other social science disciplines. Moreover, the city has a particular place in Western thought about democracy. This is because of the iconic status of classical Greek, medieval Italian and other city-states in debates about the origins and destinations of democratic practices. This association between cities and democracy has been reinforced by affinities between the city and the idea of citizenship; by on-going traditions emphasising the need for more participatory, local forms of democratic governance; and by recent concerns with social capital as a means of 'making democracy work' (Putnam 1993). This chapter will argue that, in fact, cities are not good models for democracy in general, and that it is hazardous to view them as uniquely important sites for deepening democratic governance. There are two important senses in which the spatiality of the city is considered to be important to debates about democracy. Firstly, cities are favoured spaces for thinking about democracy because of importance attributed to the types of democratic practices that they have made or can make possible. In particular, the interpersonal proximity and density of contact facilitated by cities have always held out the hope of cities as places where better, more participatory, or at least more involving democratic practices might thrive. This hope is connected to interpretations of democracy's past in which city-states are figured as privileged sites for the exploration of forms of democracy seen as more theoretically defensible or practically engaging than modern representative institutions operating in cities and at broader scales. © 2009 Springer Netherlands.

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APA

Low, M. (2009). Cities as spaces of democracy: Complexity, scale, and governance. In Does Truth Matter?: Democracy and Public Space (pp. 115–132). Springer Netherlands. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4020-8849-0_9

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