Abstract

For many, shifting economic and social contexts have created the conditions for a radical reappraisal of the orthodox image of the 'sustainable city'. However, in assessing such potentialities, there is insufficient knowledge about the way in which local actors construct, live out and are gripped by this signifier. This article responds to this deficit by exploring how key actors engaged in urban development actually interpret the challenges of the 'sustainable city'. In part, using a Q methodology study in Bristol and Grenoble, we discern and construct three distinctive discourses of the sustainable city, which we name progressive reformism, public localism, and moral stewardship. Our findings challenge previous critiques of sustainable urbanism. We observe no consistent support for mainstream conceptions of sustainable urban development, but neither do we find significant support for entrepreneurial or radical green localist discourses of the sustainable city. Instead, we identify a common indifference to the tenets of ecological modernization (and, by extension, entrepreneurialism), and a shared skepticism of local self-sufficiency. We thus argue that such discourses offer uncertain foundations upon which to construct new visions of the 'sustainable city'. In our view, this is because of the transformation of the 'sustainable city' from a relatively fixed idea into a floating signifier, coupled with the practices of local practitioners as policy bricoleurs. We conclude that efforts to develop new visions of 'sustainable cities' are best served by fostering an agonistic ethos of 'pragmatic adversarialism' amongst strategic leaders and stakeholders, which foregrounds politics and the right to difference.

Highlights

  • Shifting economic and social contexts have created the conditions for a radical reappraisal of the orthodox image of the 'sustainable city'

  • This article responds to this deficit by exploring how key actors engaged in urban development interpret the challenges of the 'sustainable city'

  • We observe no consistent support for mainstream conceptions of sustainable urban development, but neither do we find significant support for entrepreneurial or radical green localist discourses of the sustainable city

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Summary

Contents lists available at ScienceDirect

Characterizing and evaluating rival discourses of the ‘sustainable city’: Towards a politics of pragmatic adversarialism*. It is conceivable that the idea functioned as a unifying nodal point before the global financial crisis e what we shall call in our analysis an empty signifier e which enabled the construction of equivalential relations between economic growth, environmental protection and social justice, while excluding more radical eco-egalitarian visions of the city, we show that the ‘sustainable city’ is better understood as a floating signifier that can be articulated by various forces and projects Given this characterization and evaluation, our article sets out three fruitful lines of inquiry into how local actors construct visions of the ‘sustainable city’. We turn to questions of research design, where we begin by tracing the discursive terrain of the sustainable city before turning to questions of comparative urbanism and our use of Q methodology

Research design
Bristol and Grenoble
The three discourses compared
Towards pragmatic adversaralism
Conclusion
Findings
PR PL MS
Full Text
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