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How local practices of sociopolitical innovation develop: And why this matters for urban transformations

Hulst,Merlijn Van
Durose,Catherine
Agger,Annika
Abstract
This article addresses a critical gap in extant theorizing of urban transformations by focusing on the political and temporal dimensions of how innovations emerge, develop and become institutionalized into alternative systems of the everyday such as social centres, community gardens or urban commons. Going beyond current approaches, we offer a new understanding of innovations as sociopolitical practices: sets of resourced activities aiming to reshape urban spaces to achieve social and political ends locally. Developing an original theorization of such practices, we identify and differentiate between three sets of activities designed to meet local needs: assembling innovations—identifying and employing a wide variety of local resources within a neighbourhood; extending innovations—broadening the scope of initiatives and making them last; and, institutionalizing innovations, anchoring them in a more formalized structure. Sociopolitical innovations require sustained practices whereby situated agents pragmatically push for change over time. While the ongoing development of systems of the everyday may have limited immediate transformative impact, the reshaping of local resources prefigures an alternative which breaks from, yet is embedded in, everyday urban life. Our theorizing is underpinned by an international qualitative study of neighbourhoods in four European cities: Amsterdam, Birmingham, Copenhagen and Glasgow.
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Date
2024-07-17
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Research Projects
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Journal Issue
Keywords
everyday practices, political action, self-governance, social innovation, transformation, urban neighbourhoods, SDG 11 - Sustainable Cities and Communities
Citation
Hulst, M V, Durose, C & Agger, A 2024, 'How local practices of sociopolitical innovation develop : And why this matters for urban transformations', International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, vol. 48, no. 4, pp. 585-602. https://doi.org/10.1111/1468-2427.13246
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