Global Urbanization: The City in the Twenty-First Century. Edited by Eugenie L. Birch, Susan M. Wachter. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2011. 377 pp., $75.00 hardcover (ISBN-13: 978-0-08122-4284-3). Cities & Sovereignty: Identity Politics in Urban Spaces. Edited by Diane E. Davis, Nora Libertum de Duren. Bloomington and Indianapolis: Indiana University Press, 2011. 272 pp., $27.95 paperback (ISBN 13: 978-0-253-22274-9). Cities are increasingly important sites in global affairs. Alongside recognition of watershed moments in the history of human populations and major political economic shifts, it is increasingly acknowledged that some of the most important global social, environmental, and security challenges must be worked out on the ground in cities. As global politics urbanize and urban politics globalize, a vast literature has sprung up to frame the most pressing challenges at the intersection of urban and global politics. Over the past three decades, this literature has been characterized primarily by inquiry into the disproportionate presence of globally influential organizations—advanced producer and financial services firms, global energy corporations, global NGOs—in a relatively small number of cities. In this literature, the influence of globalization has been of primary interest. Because of recent demographic shifts, this literature has been joined by an increasing focus on the ways in which urbanization places demands upon local development patterns and governance capabilities. Global Urbanization: The City in the Twenty-First Century and Cities & Sovereignty: Identity Politics in Urban Spaces both make significant contributions to this literature. Both of these books are edited volumes. While edited volumes sometimes risk incoherence, each of these succeeds by establishing a strong focus for the volume, organizing chapters so that each section of the book has its own coherence, and choosing authors who have similar theoretical commitments and methodological frameworks even though they have different disciplinary backgrounds. All of these features mean that these two books are in some ways more readable than many other edited volumes. Global Urbanization focuses on the intersection of population and urban development, giving special attention to the challenges of large-scale urbanization in cities of the Global South. The book is careful to treat problems of socially inclusive economic growth, environmental sustainability, and infrastructure resilience for a …
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