Social movements and regeneration : within, without, against?
By: CHESTERS, Graeme.
Material type: ArticlePublisher: Taylor & Francis, june2009Local Government Studies 35, 3, p. 371-384Abstract: This article examines the relationship between social movements and regeneration in the context of globalisation by describing how the advent of a global civil society provides new modes of engagement and contestation with the political and economic forces that define and determine regeneration processes. The article argues that regeneration should be conceived as a dynamic field of relationships to which social movements can contribute new material, symbolic and intellectual resources, and it examines the evolution of participatory budgeting as an example of this potential.This article examines the relationship between social movements and regeneration in the context of globalisation by describing how the advent of a global civil society provides new modes of engagement and contestation with the political and economic forces that define and determine regeneration processes. The article argues that regeneration should be conceived as a dynamic field of relationships to which social movements can contribute new material, symbolic and intellectual resources, and it examines the evolution of participatory budgeting as an example of this potential.
Social movements; regeneration; participatory budgeting; global civil society
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