New Approaches to Governance and Rule in Urban Europe Since 1500

New Approaches to Governance and Rule in Urban Europe Since 1500

Gunn, Simon; Hulme, Tom

Taylor & Francis Ltd

12/2021

304

Mole

Inglês

9781032237244

15 a 20 dias

403

Descrição não disponível.
Introduction: Unravelling Urban Governance Part I: Elites, Institutions, and Civil Society 1. Reassessing Power and Governance in Late Medieval Cities: Institutions and the Cursus Honorum 2. Urban Governance and Prison Building in Pre-Famine Ireland, 1820-1845 3. Governing Taste: Fin-de-SieIcle Cracow, Its Museums and the Urban Elite in the Shaping of the Modern Metropolis Part II: Behaviour and the Governing of Morality 4. Governing Sexuality: Regulating Prostitution in Early Modern Europe 5. Negotiating Urban Governance: Norm Entrepreneurs in Dutch Cities, 1850-1900 Part III: Urban Rituals and the Performance of Power 6. The St Francis Housing Project: Rituals, Symbols and Discourses in Housing Policies in Rome After the Second World War 7. Post-War Urban Pageants in Finland: Performance, Participation and Power Part IV: Governmentality and the State 8. The Foundation of St Petersburg as a Variation upon Foucault's Governmentality: The Russian Service City, 1703-1740 9. Urban Materialities: Citizenship, Public Housing and Governance in Modern Britain 10. "A Community Not Our Own": Urban Enclosure and Spatial Governmentality Under Fascism Part V: Beyond Foucault: New Narratives for Urban Governance 11. Urban Individuality and Urban Governance in Twentieth-Century Europe 12. Heterodoxies: New Approaches to Power and Agency in the Modern City
National Library;Young Men;Urban power and politics;Town Hall;governmentality;Early Nineteenth Century Ireland;morality;Instituto Nacional De La Vivienda;popular culture;Czartoryski Museum;UK Conference;Ordnance Survey Ireland;Civil Society;Urban Governance;Exhibitionary Complex;Prison Inspectors;Historical Pageants;Grand Jurors;Pius XII;Public Infrastructure;Socio-economic Development;Assize Judges;Cursus Honorum;Central Government;Late Medieval Cities;Urban Individuality;Norm Entrepreneurs;West Germany;Urban Traffic Flow