Migration-Led Institutional Change in Urban Development and Planning

The migration-city-nexus has become central in migration and urban studies alike. This ‘local turn’ has not only initiated a rethinking of the local level as an independent level of migration policy-making but also broadened the discourse on how migration processes actually change cities. Therefore,...

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Main Authors: Robert Barbarino, Charlotte Räuchle, Wolfgang Scholz
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Cogitatio 2021-04-01
Series:Urban Planning
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.cogitatiopress.com/urbanplanning/article/view/4356
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spelling doaj-42f469255e444e42a6fb5277ce61b8b32021-04-27T08:51:02ZengCogitatioUrban Planning2183-76352021-04-016210.17645/up.v6i2.43561963Migration-Led Institutional Change in Urban Development and PlanningRobert Barbarino0Charlotte Räuchle1Wolfgang Scholz2School of Spatial Planning, TU Dortmund University, GermanyInstitute of Geographical Science, Department of Earth Science, Free University Berlin, GermanySchool of Spatial Planning, TU Dortmund University, GermanyThe migration-city-nexus has become central in migration and urban studies alike. This ‘local turn’ has not only initiated a rethinking of the local level as an independent level of migration policy-making but also broadened the discourse on how migration processes actually change cities. Therefore, the thematic issue at hand seeks to understand how migration-led development processes in cities promote and shape institutional change, and which actors transform policies, structures, and discourses on migration in different settings. It questions how migration-related issues in urban development are being handled and transformed by local state and civil society actors. With 11 empirical articles on local negotiations of migration in urban development in different settings, this thematic issue applies an institutional change perspective on local migration policy-making to contribute to a broader understanding of migration-led development in both urban and migration studies. When it comes to clearly capturing migration-led institutional change in urban development and planning, the contributions demonstrate great heterogeneity. They reveal that research on migration-led institutional change still has many biases and is very dependent on theoretical perspectives, positionalities of researchers, and the local context of the case studies.https://www.cogitatiopress.com/urbanplanning/article/view/4356institutional changemigrationurban developmenturban governance
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Robert Barbarino
Charlotte Räuchle
Wolfgang Scholz
spellingShingle Robert Barbarino
Charlotte Räuchle
Wolfgang Scholz
Migration-Led Institutional Change in Urban Development and Planning
Urban Planning
institutional change
migration
urban development
urban governance
author_facet Robert Barbarino
Charlotte Räuchle
Wolfgang Scholz
author_sort Robert Barbarino
title Migration-Led Institutional Change in Urban Development and Planning
title_short Migration-Led Institutional Change in Urban Development and Planning
title_full Migration-Led Institutional Change in Urban Development and Planning
title_fullStr Migration-Led Institutional Change in Urban Development and Planning
title_full_unstemmed Migration-Led Institutional Change in Urban Development and Planning
title_sort migration-led institutional change in urban development and planning
publisher Cogitatio
series Urban Planning
issn 2183-7635
publishDate 2021-04-01
description The migration-city-nexus has become central in migration and urban studies alike. This ‘local turn’ has not only initiated a rethinking of the local level as an independent level of migration policy-making but also broadened the discourse on how migration processes actually change cities. Therefore, the thematic issue at hand seeks to understand how migration-led development processes in cities promote and shape institutional change, and which actors transform policies, structures, and discourses on migration in different settings. It questions how migration-related issues in urban development are being handled and transformed by local state and civil society actors. With 11 empirical articles on local negotiations of migration in urban development in different settings, this thematic issue applies an institutional change perspective on local migration policy-making to contribute to a broader understanding of migration-led development in both urban and migration studies. When it comes to clearly capturing migration-led institutional change in urban development and planning, the contributions demonstrate great heterogeneity. They reveal that research on migration-led institutional change still has many biases and is very dependent on theoretical perspectives, positionalities of researchers, and the local context of the case studies.
topic institutional change
migration
urban development
urban governance
url https://www.cogitatiopress.com/urbanplanning/article/view/4356
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AT charlotterauchle migrationledinstitutionalchangeinurbandevelopmentandplanning
AT wolfgangscholz migrationledinstitutionalchangeinurbandevelopmentandplanning
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