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Urban Living Labs in times of post-pandemic epistemic injustices: a speculative realist revision

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  • Pijpers, Kevin

Abstract

The Urban Living Lab (ULL) is an aspirational device to materialize practices designed around co- production, participation, and transformation in the public arena. It is a research approach that emphasizes short-lived in-situ collaborations purified from the wider ex-situ political and social reality. This approach can strengthen epistemic trust injustices and harms by enforcing an overbearing mode of consensus-seeking participation around dominant epistemic regimes. This paper formulates an alternative, speculative realist approach to the ULL and analyses an ethnographic vignette to explore the intricacies, ambiguities, and disagreements within a post- pandemic ULL-situation in a community playground in Rotterdam South. Through these analyses, this paper takes inventory of matters of care in this stigmatized territory to show how an ULL might be done if it is to generate epistemic justice and social transformation.

Suggested Citation

  • Pijpers, Kevin, 2024. "Urban Living Labs in times of post-pandemic epistemic injustices: a speculative realist revision," SocArXiv rh6fc, Center for Open Science.
  • Handle: RePEc:osf:socarx:rh6fc
    DOI: 10.31219/osf.io/rh6fc
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    References listed on IDEAS

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    1. Sabrina Rahmawan‐Huizenga & Dara Ivanova, 2022. "THE URBAN LAB: Imaginative Work in the City," International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, Wiley Blackwell, vol. 46(4), pages 542-557, July.
    2. Rianne Dekker & Juan Franco Contreras & Albert Meijer, 2020. "The Living Lab as a Methodology for Public Administration Research: a Systematic Literature Review of its Applications in the Social Sciences," International Journal of Public Administration, Taylor & Francis Journals, vol. 43(14), pages 1207-1217, October.
    3. Andrew Karvonen & Bas Heur, 2014. "Urban Laboratories: Experiments in Reworking Cities," International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, Wiley Blackwell, vol. 38(2), pages 379-392, March.
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