Limits to openness: (Record no. 14421)
[ view plain ]
000 -LEADER | |
---|---|
fixed length control field | 01957nab a2200181 4500 |
005 - DATE & TIME | |
control field | 20230831123641.0 |
008 - FIXED-LENGTH DATA ELEMENTS--GENERAL INFORMATION | |
fixed length control field | 230831b |||||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d |
100 ## - MAIN ENTRY--PERSONAL NAME | |
Personal name | Lorne, Colin |
245 ## - TITLE STATEMENT | |
Title | Limits to openness: |
Sub Title | Co working, design and social innovation in the neoliberal city/ |
260 ## - PUBLICATION, DISTRIBUTION, ETC. (IMPRINT) | |
Name of publisher, distributor, etc | Sage, |
Date of publication, distribution, etc | 2020. |
300 ## - PHYSICAL DESCRIPTION | |
Pages | Vol. 52, Issue 4, 2020 ( 747–765 p.) |
520 ## - SUMMARY, ETC. | |
Summary, etc | This article examines the emergence of ‘open’ urban economic projects that promote the transformative potential of social innovation and civic enterprise. By putting the burgeoning literature on an open paradigm of work and innovation within cultural economic geography into dialogue with scholarship on open cities, I problematize the inherently progressive framing of openness. The paper makes two contributions. First, it emphasises how open narratives encourage entrepreneurial communities that manifest as individualization-masked-as-collectivism. It argues efforts to design new spaces of social innovation through the blurring of boundaries simultaneously reproduce social and material exclusions. Second, it demonstrates how the championing of open ecosystems of social innovation intersects with austerity localism. New modes of state withdrawal are facilitated through co-creation, crowdfunding and social enterprise. Illustrated through research into a co-working space in London set up in response to the 2007–2008 economic crisis, I reveal the geographies of exclusion, enclosure and exploitation embedded in the pursuit of openness. Against the claims of enabling conditions for progressive civic futures, I establish the limits to openness whereby such ideas are easily assimilated into the processes of neoliberalisation that they seek to reject. |
773 0# - HOST ITEM ENTRY | |
Host Biblionumber | 8877 |
Host Itemnumber | 17103 |
Place, publisher, and date of publication | London Pion Ltd. 2010 |
Title | Environment and planning A |
International Standard Serial Number | 1472-3409 |
856 ## - ELECTRONIC LOCATION AND ACCESS | |
Uniform Resource Identifier | https://doi.org/10.1177/0308518X19876941 |
942 ## - ADDED ENTRY ELEMENTS (KOHA) | |
Koha item type | E-Journal |
100 ## - MAIN ENTRY--PERSONAL NAME | |
-- | 57381 |
942 ## - ADDED ENTRY ELEMENTS (KOHA) | |
-- | ddc |
No items available.