Whose Park? The forty-year fight for Folkets Park under Copenhagen’s evolving urban managerialism

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articlepeer-review

Standard

Whose Park? The forty-year fight for Folkets Park under Copenhagen’s evolving urban managerialism. / Rutt, Rebecca Leigh; Loveless, Stephanie.

In: People, Place and Policy Online, Vol. 12, No. 2, 2018, p. 99-117.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Rutt, RL & Loveless, S 2018, 'Whose Park? The forty-year fight for Folkets Park under Copenhagen’s evolving urban managerialism', People, Place and Policy Online, vol. 12, no. 2, pp. 99-117. https://doi.org/10.3351/ppp.2018.6224795825

APA

Rutt, R. L., & Loveless, S. (2018). Whose Park? The forty-year fight for Folkets Park under Copenhagen’s evolving urban managerialism. People, Place and Policy Online, 12(2), 99-117. https://doi.org/10.3351/ppp.2018.6224795825

Vancouver

Rutt RL, Loveless S. Whose Park? The forty-year fight for Folkets Park under Copenhagen’s evolving urban managerialism. People, Place and Policy Online. 2018;12(2):99-117. https://doi.org/10.3351/ppp.2018.6224795825

Author

Rutt, Rebecca Leigh ; Loveless, Stephanie. / Whose Park? The forty-year fight for Folkets Park under Copenhagen’s evolving urban managerialism. In: People, Place and Policy Online. 2018 ; Vol. 12, No. 2. pp. 99-117.

Bibtex

@article{d433c67b6d98496a93e234d10c537d03,
title = "Whose Park? The forty-year fight for Folkets Park under Copenhagen{\textquoteright}s evolving urban managerialism",
abstract = "This paper interrogates the evolution of struggles over a park in Copenhagen, Denmark. This evolution is situated between local residents{\textquoteright} efforts to obtain socio-environmental justice, and attempts to manage the space by municipal authorities for different agendas. Analytically bringing the concepts of environmental justice and urban managerialism into focus and drawing from lessons and stories of the past, we show how managerial practices and justice struggles evolve iteratively over time. We document how the beginnings of Folkets Park (the People{\textquoteright}s Park) in the late 1970s were characterized by struggles over distributional justice between economically marginalized residents and urban managers. The conflicts changed to contestation over procedural and interactive justice, due to the formalization of the park and expanding struggles for recognition and claims to the space by a diversifying population. Trends of decentralization to municipal levels and greater inclusivity have also taken root, maintaining urban managers as distributors of justice. Yet, we demonstrate that urban managers do not act in isolation. Local activists are an important force in urban development, producing an iterative evolution of strategies of management and justice struggles in this neighbourhood. Urban managerialism in Copenhagen, including the more contemporary efforts at inclusion, is also (re)shaped, inhibited, and co-opted by the larger context of increasingly neoliberal and socially divisive political agendas. By examining this micro-cosmos of a contested urban park, we show that urban planning and development is an inherently political and contested practice, and argue for urban managers to continuously seek inspiration from local activism in the pursuit of just cities of today and tomorrow.",
author = "Rutt, {Rebecca Leigh} and Stephanie Loveless",
year = "2018",
doi = "10.3351/ppp.2018.6224795825",
language = "English",
volume = "12",
pages = "99--117",
journal = "People, Place and Policy Online",
issn = "1753-8041",
publisher = "Sheffield Hallam University",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Whose Park? The forty-year fight for Folkets Park under Copenhagen’s evolving urban managerialism

AU - Rutt, Rebecca Leigh

AU - Loveless, Stephanie

PY - 2018

Y1 - 2018

N2 - This paper interrogates the evolution of struggles over a park in Copenhagen, Denmark. This evolution is situated between local residents’ efforts to obtain socio-environmental justice, and attempts to manage the space by municipal authorities for different agendas. Analytically bringing the concepts of environmental justice and urban managerialism into focus and drawing from lessons and stories of the past, we show how managerial practices and justice struggles evolve iteratively over time. We document how the beginnings of Folkets Park (the People’s Park) in the late 1970s were characterized by struggles over distributional justice between economically marginalized residents and urban managers. The conflicts changed to contestation over procedural and interactive justice, due to the formalization of the park and expanding struggles for recognition and claims to the space by a diversifying population. Trends of decentralization to municipal levels and greater inclusivity have also taken root, maintaining urban managers as distributors of justice. Yet, we demonstrate that urban managers do not act in isolation. Local activists are an important force in urban development, producing an iterative evolution of strategies of management and justice struggles in this neighbourhood. Urban managerialism in Copenhagen, including the more contemporary efforts at inclusion, is also (re)shaped, inhibited, and co-opted by the larger context of increasingly neoliberal and socially divisive political agendas. By examining this micro-cosmos of a contested urban park, we show that urban planning and development is an inherently political and contested practice, and argue for urban managers to continuously seek inspiration from local activism in the pursuit of just cities of today and tomorrow.

AB - This paper interrogates the evolution of struggles over a park in Copenhagen, Denmark. This evolution is situated between local residents’ efforts to obtain socio-environmental justice, and attempts to manage the space by municipal authorities for different agendas. Analytically bringing the concepts of environmental justice and urban managerialism into focus and drawing from lessons and stories of the past, we show how managerial practices and justice struggles evolve iteratively over time. We document how the beginnings of Folkets Park (the People’s Park) in the late 1970s were characterized by struggles over distributional justice between economically marginalized residents and urban managers. The conflicts changed to contestation over procedural and interactive justice, due to the formalization of the park and expanding struggles for recognition and claims to the space by a diversifying population. Trends of decentralization to municipal levels and greater inclusivity have also taken root, maintaining urban managers as distributors of justice. Yet, we demonstrate that urban managers do not act in isolation. Local activists are an important force in urban development, producing an iterative evolution of strategies of management and justice struggles in this neighbourhood. Urban managerialism in Copenhagen, including the more contemporary efforts at inclusion, is also (re)shaped, inhibited, and co-opted by the larger context of increasingly neoliberal and socially divisive political agendas. By examining this micro-cosmos of a contested urban park, we show that urban planning and development is an inherently political and contested practice, and argue for urban managers to continuously seek inspiration from local activism in the pursuit of just cities of today and tomorrow.

U2 - 10.3351/ppp.2018.6224795825

DO - 10.3351/ppp.2018.6224795825

M3 - Journal article

VL - 12

SP - 99

EP - 117

JO - People, Place and Policy Online

JF - People, Place and Policy Online

SN - 1753-8041

IS - 2

ER -

ID: 209837018