D ubai in the ‘Middle’
2014; Wiley; Volume: 38; Issue: 5 Linguagem: Inglês
10.1111/1468-2427.12190
ISSN1468-2427
Autores Tópico(s)Urban Planning and Governance
ResumoAbstract In the early 2000s, D ubai seemed the apotheosis of the global city model. Lauded as an embodiment of globalist ideals, or harshly criticized as a representation of the dangers of contemporary urbanism, it was clearly under the spotlight. Then, like the concept of the ‘global city’ itself, it disappeared from the headlines, to be subject only to sporadic and cynical attention. Today some are heralding a ‘return’ of D ubai from the anonymity of the middle ground of global city hierarchies and rankings. What is often forgotten, however, is that urbanism in D ubai did not stop. On the contrary, D ubai's continuous ‘worlding’ offers a productive opportunity for the encounter of ‘global’ and ‘ordinary’ modes of urban analysis. By unpacking the construction of a global D ubai, this article advocates greater sensitivity to the multiscalar politics that shape its continuity. Stepping beyond rumours of crisis and decline, it aims to connect the global fortunes and everyday processes that jointly characterize the development of global cities. ‘Global’ and ‘ordinary’ urbanism, it argues, are but two registers of how we could, in Warren Magnusson's words, ‘see like a city’.
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