Abstract

This short paper discusses two issues related to the Occupy Wall Street movement. First, a local urban political geography is presented in which Liberty Plaza is not the accidental place of Occupy Wall Street but a deliberate one, not only because it is located between the towers of global capital, but also because it constitutes a so-called “privately owned public space” (POPS). Second, a global financial political geography is presented in which I argue that the imprecise demands of Occupy Wall Street are a result not so much of the heterogeneous base of the movement but of the still largely unknown and “under-understood” nature of finance.

Highlights

  • A Local Urban Political Geography mayor and Brookfield

  • URL : http://journals.openedition.org/belgeo/6155 ; DOI : 10.4000/ belgeo.6155. This text was automatically generated on 19 April 2019

  • 1 Most protests call for specific changes in specific places

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Summary

Introduction

A Local Urban Political Geography mayor and Brookfield. For a few weeks the strategy of “Brookberg” or “Bloomfield” seemed to be to freeze the protesters out, but on the night of November 14-15, 2011 the Mayor had Liberty Plaza cleared without prior announcement. ISSN: 2294-9135 Publisher: National Committee of Geography of Belgium, Société Royale Belge de Géographie Aalbers, « Socializing space and politicizing financial innovation/destruction: some observations on Occupy Wall Street », Belgeo [Online], 1-2 | 2012, Online since 15 December 2012, connection on 19 April 2019. URL : http://journals.openedition.org/belgeo/6155 ; DOI : 10.4000/ belgeo.6155

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