Urban Peacebuilding In Divided Societies

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A01=Scott Bollens
Author_Scott Bollens
Belfast City
BUA
Category=JP
Central Community Relations Unit
Central Government
contested urban spaces
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
ethnic coexistence policy strategies
ethnic conflict management
Gauteng Province
Gauteng Provincial Government
Greater Soweto
Low Cost Housing Provision
MBW
Metropolitan Johannesburg
National Housing Board
NIHE
North Belfast
Post-apartheid Johannesburg
Post-apartheid Planning
post-conflict reconciliation
Shack Settlements
social psychology of cities
territoriality and land use
Tiger's Bay
Tiger’s Bay
Town Planning Schemes
Transitional Metropolitan Council
Ulster Unionist Party
Urban Ethnic
urban geography research
Urban Policy
Urban Policy Strategies
Urban Policymakers
Urban System

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367217211
  • Weight: 476g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 30 Jun 2022
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Urban Peacebuilding in Divided Societies explores the effects of urban policy and planning in the management of ethnic conflict in strife-torn societies, focusing on the cases of Belfast and Johannesburg. It combines perspectives from urban geography, political science, social psychology, and urban planning to study the relationship between ethnic ideologies and the urban strategies that affect ethnic territoriality in the form of urban land use, housing, economic development, services, and citizen involvement. The book contrasts Belfast, embedded within an uncertain shift from conflict to political settlement, with Johannesburg, engaged in post-resolution reconciliation, to analyze, along different points of societal transition, the contributions of urban policymaking to peacemaking and peacebuilding. It describes the differing rolesobstructive or facilitativethat contested cities can play amidst broader peacemaking efforts, consistent with Bollens contention that there are lessons in urban peacebuilding for constructing mutually tolerable living environments at the regional and national levels. Effectively, cities (and urban policies) are the locus for operationalizing national ideologies of ethnic coexistence. } Urban Peacebuilding in Divided Societies explores the effects of urban policy and planning in the management of ethnic conflict in strife-torn societies, focusing on the cases of Belfast and Johannesburg. It combines perspectives from urban geography, political science, social psychology, and urban planning to study the relationship between ethnic ideologies and the urban strategies that affect ethnic territoriality in the form of urban land use, housing, economic development, services, and citizen involvement. The book contrasts Belfast, embedded within an uncertain shift from conflict to political settlement, with Johannesburg, engaged in post-resolution reconciliation, to analyze, along different points of societal transition, the contributions of urban policymaking to peacemaking and peacebuilding. It describes the differing rolesobstructive or facilitativethat contested cities can play amidst broader peacemaking efforts, consistent with Bollens contention that there are lessons in urban peacebuilding for constructing mutually tolerable living environments at the regional and national levels. Effectively, cities (and urban policies) are the locus for operationalizing national ideologies of ethnic coexistence.}

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