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Engineering Cities: Mediating Materialities, Infrastructural Imaginaries and Shifting Regimes of Urban Expertise

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  • Lisa Björkman
  • Andrew Harris

Abstract

This symposium opens up new critical insights and analytical perspectives into the relationships between power, politics, materiality and urban engineering. In so doing it demonstrates the central role of engineers in the production and negotiation of everyday life in the city. In contrast to the technocratic exercise engineering often professes to be, the contributors to this symposium argue that the assembling and choreography of cities through the myriad techniques, routines, standards and visions of engineers is inextricably bound up with broader socio†cultural, material and political urban dynamics and processes. This necessitates investigating the multiple and competing social imaginations, forms of knowledge and regimes of expertise associated with urban engineering. The symposium's five articles, straddling disciplinary backgrounds in geography, anthropology, engineering and history, focus analytical and empirical attention on the figure of the engineer and on the work of engineering in the cities of Paris, Mumbai, Singapore and London. Engineering, we suggest, is a diagnostic for probing the shifting forms of mediation that animate and inhabit contemporary dynamics of urban change. The symposium thus opens up a new avenue for cross†disciplinary and transregional research for urban studies while also suggesting innovative ways of conceptualizing urban transformation and contestation.

Suggested Citation

  • Lisa Björkman & Andrew Harris, 2018. "Engineering Cities: Mediating Materialities, Infrastructural Imaginaries and Shifting Regimes of Urban Expertise," International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, Wiley Blackwell, vol. 42(2), pages 244-262, March.
  • Handle: RePEc:bla:ijurrs:v:42:y:2018:i:2:p:244-262
    DOI: 10.1111/1468-2427.12528
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    Cited by:

    1. Usmaan Farooqui, 2020. "Politics of neutrality: Urban knowledge practices and everyday formalisation in Karachi’s waterscape," Urban Studies, Urban Studies Journal Limited, vol. 57(12), pages 2423-2439, September.
    2. Ramesh, Niranjana, 2021. "Between fragments and ordering: engineering water infrastructures in a postcolonial city," LSE Research Online Documents on Economics 108171, London School of Economics and Political Science, LSE Library.
    3. Ramesh, Niranjana, 2022. "An experiment with the minor geographies of major cities: infrastructural relations among the fragments," LSE Research Online Documents on Economics 114952, London School of Economics and Political Science, LSE Library.
    4. Van Assche, Kristof & Duineveld, Martijn & Beunen, Raoul & Valentinov, Vladislav & Gruezmacher, Monica, 2022. "Material dependencies: hidden underpinnings of sustainability transitions," EconStor Open Access Articles and Book Chapters, ZBW - Leibniz Information Centre for Economics, vol. 24(3), pages 281-296.
    5. Valentin Meilinger & Jochen Monstadt, 2022. "FROM THE SANITARY CITY TO THE CIRCULAR CITY? Technopolitics of Wastewater Restructuring in Los Angeles, California," International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, Wiley Blackwell, vol. 46(2), pages 182-201, March.
    6. Mattias Qviström & Nik Luka & Greet De Block, 2019. "Beyond Circular Thinking: Geographies of Transit‐Oriented Development," International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, Wiley Blackwell, vol. 43(4), pages 786-793, July.
    7. Donald McNeill, 2019. "Volumetric urbanism: The production and extraction of Singaporean territory," Environment and Planning A, , vol. 51(4), pages 849-868, June.
    8. Emma Colven, 2020. "Thinking beyond success and failure: Dutch water expertise and friction in postcolonial Jakarta," Environment and Planning C, , vol. 38(6), pages 961-979, September.
    9. Niranjana R, 2022. "An experiment with the minor geographies of major cities: Infrastructural relations among the fragments," Urban Studies, Urban Studies Journal Limited, vol. 59(8), pages 1556-1574, June.
    10. von der Tann, Loretta & Ritter, Stefan & Hale, Sarah & Langford, Jenny & Salazar, Sean, 2021. "From urban underground space (UUS) to sustainable underground urbanism (SUU): Shifting the focus in urban underground scholarship," Land Use Policy, Elsevier, vol. 109(C).

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