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Images of regeneration. Revitalization/rebirth/restart/regrowthConnotationsdeath/life: bring back lifeillness/health: restore healthdecline/growth: end decline/bring growthSo: a good thingBut life of what, health of what, growth in what?. Urban regeneration as a claim made by promoters of new
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1. Urban Regeneration: behind the label Chris Pickvance
Professor of Urban Studies
School of Social Policy, Sociology and Social Research
University of Kent
2. Images of regeneration Revitalization/rebirth/restart/regrowth
Connotations
death/life: bring back life
illness/health: restore health
decline/growth: end decline/bring growth
So: a good thing
But life of what, health of what, growth in what?
3. Urban regeneration as a claim made by promoters of new developments
Olympic Games Barcelona/Beijing/London: legacy effect is urban regeneration: part of the case advanced
Cultural and sports events/museums
Bilbao Guggenheim Museum,
Glasgow City of Culture
Sheffield World Student Game
All are industrial cities searching for new industries/images
Margate: Turner gallery
Inner city redevelopment: new office blocks in place of slum housing
Renovation of housing: convert from rented to single family housing.
4. Urban regeneration as part of the new city marketing or urban image building Urban competition as a domain of conflict
How new?
Who is competing with who?
Between nations or between city types?
International level: world cities with each other? London, New York, Tokyo
World city definition: highest level of concentration of corporate headquarters, hence level of control
Second order cities with each other: Manchester/Milan/Munich
All cities want to be called world cities e.g. Paris, Berlin, Beijing, hence the pressure to avoid a clear definition
Emphasis on PR/hype. But images matter to decision-makers
5. Analytical or justificatory/symbolic Knocking down houses and replacing them by new ones, or urban regeneration
Urban regeneration has a very strong symbolic element
It draws on the ideas of renewal and urban competition
It defines itself as something obviously good and therefore discourages critical analysis
It is a symbol in shaping elite and public perceptions of change
Urban regeneration is part of a justificatory discourse
6. Urban regeneration: a concept with many meanings For the existing population, or for a new population
(Displacement of existing population by new one)
Urban regeneration as a euphemism for
gentrification?
Replace old land uses with new
Population growth: new population
Businesses: more, different kind: science parks, tourism
Jobs: more, a different kind (who for? local residents, commuters)
Shopping facilities/sports arenas/cultural facilities
So there are:
many types of urban regeneration
having different aims and effects
7. First problem: define what urban regeneration means In an era of governance, the state acts in concert with private sector actors and voluntary/charitable sector actors. But the power position of state is often dominant.
Two definitions of urban regeneration
Wider definition: policies and initiatives which impact on urban regeneration
Narrower definition: policies and initiatives which are labelled urban regeneration
Only focussing on the second means accepting government labels as to the effects of policy (regeneration) when the reason for this label may be symbolic.
Private sector regeneration in Kent: Whitstable, Folkestone?
Was the plan for housing and a science park by Imperial College at Wye rural regeneration?
8. Second problem: separate urban regeneration from all the simultaneous trends and policies Economic context: broader spatial economic trends (international, national, regional, metropolitan, urban), industrial location patterns, trends affecting labour markets and supply of skills
Social context: general trends in household formation/ fission, migration, commuting, housing market trends.
Policy context: EU policy, UK government regional and urban policies and initiatives, local planning policy, local government and local governance. Government policy relating to urban regeneration
9. Third problem: how to evaluate urban regeneration policy What is policy evaluation?
Concepts of policy evaluation:
Costs/benefits: costs of what? problems of measuring inputs, what are benefits: output and outcome measures (jobs, city image)
Realization of aims: but do policies have aims? Programmes=policies without aims? What are aims? One or many? Constant or changing? Aims and objectives as social constructs.
Cause-effect relations: never observable, always a matter of inference
Unintended effects
Problems
subjective and objective measures
10. More on evaluating urban regeneration policy Assumptions about speed of impact: when to evaluate? (Short and long-term effects)
How to evaluate: economic, social, political, and psychological effects.
Effects on who (residents, displaced residents, tourists), what (firms, rents, property values, employment), where (within the target area, outside the target area)
Positive and negative effects
11. Conclusion Urban regeneration is a way of describing or constructing development activities
Its concern is to mobilise support for them
It is not an attempt to provide a precise understanding
Social scientists who want to understand it need to go behind the label of urban regeneration to understand what it conceals.