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Justifying Redevelopment ‘Failures' Within Urban ‘Success Stories': Dispute, Compromise, and a New Test of Urbanity

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  • Meg Holden
  • Andy Scerri
  • Azadeh Hadizadeh Esfahani

Abstract

type="main"> Large-scale waterfront redevelopment projects, an urban development phenomenon that originated in the 1970s, are attractive to a growing suite of cities worldwide. But why? These mega-projects are full of pitfalls, broken promises, cost overruns, disappointments and are often accused of promoting inequality. In this article, we consider the specific case of Melbourne's Docklands, which local popular opinion has roundly judged a failure despite the countervailing judgment of success in the revival of ‘liveability' of the adjacent Melbourne central business district. We use the Docklands case to illustrate the utility of a ‘critical pragmatic' framework of analysis to get behind dominant explanations of the demands of the urban growth machine and postmodern neoliberal capitalism. Without denying the existence of these dynamics, nor their hegemony, we nevertheless explicate how a critical pragmatic analysis can reveal the social dynamics driving the judgments and justifications offered by actors in urban redevelopment. A pragmatic analysis of these dynamics of argument and action at critical moments in the long process of an urban redevelopment can reveal new kinds of compromises and tests by which these projects are judged. In other words, what counts as failure and as success in the work of city building will shift, depending on what actors do and how they talk about it, and on how well these actions and justifications hold up to public challenges about the true character of a successful city. By gauging how these challenges are constituted and settled, we can better understand the evolution of the urban value proposition, and the new notion of justice grounded in urbanity that is emerging at the urban redevelopment frontier.

Suggested Citation

  • Meg Holden & Andy Scerri & Azadeh Hadizadeh Esfahani, 2015. "Justifying Redevelopment ‘Failures' Within Urban ‘Success Stories': Dispute, Compromise, and a New Test of Urbanity," International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, Wiley Blackwell, vol. 39(3), pages 451-470, May.
  • Handle: RePEc:bla:ijurrs:v:39:y:2015:i:3:p:451-470
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    File URL: http://hdl.handle.net/10.1111/1468-2427.12182
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    References listed on IDEAS

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    1. Raul P. Lejano & Anne Taufen Wessells, 2006. "Community and Economic Development: Seeking Common Ground in Discourse and in Practice," Urban Studies, Urban Studies Journal Limited, vol. 43(9), pages 1469-1489, August.
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    4. Eve Chiapello & Luc Boltanski, 2005. "The New Spirit of Capitalism," Post-Print hal-00678024, HAL.
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    6. Kevin Morgan, 2002. "The New Regeneration Narrative - Local Development in the Multi-Level Polity," Local Economy, London South Bank University, vol. 17(3), pages 191-199, August.
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    Cited by:

    1. Smiley, Kevin T. & Emerson, Michael Oluf, 2017. "A Spirit of Urban Capitalism: Market Cities, People Cities, and Cultural Justifications," SocArXiv uexh9, Center for Open Science.

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