This book, based on original research in Melbourne, Australia, explores the spatial politics of urban expansion both upwards and outwards as the city continues to colonize non-urban areas around its fringes. The everyday decisions and tools bound up in urban growth accelerate a malign colonization of land, resources, air and water, thereby exacerbating a broad variety of social and environmental harms. In addition to the quotidian nature of urban growth, this book also explores the ‘crisis’ in the form of extreme fire events in urban areas. Moving between local planning and national and international climate change mitigation policies and approaches, this book highlights various 'necropolicies’ - policies causing harm and death to more-than-human populations. Such death-bound policies are the result of neoliberal urban development, fueled by state-corporate relations and prosperity concerns. In sum, this book connects green and urban criminology, urban studies and planning to reveal how ordinary and extraordinary challenges are entangled in urban design, harm and, most importantly, imagining alternative futures and cities.
Contents
List of figures, images, and tables
Foreword
1 Encountering the City
2 Living on the Edge
3 The Expanding Edges
4 Extra-ordinary
5 Necropolicy and Everyday Emergencies
6 My House is Underwater
Appendix
Notes
Bibliography
Index
KAJSA LUNDBERG is a research fellow at the Centre for Urban Research in the School of Global, Urban and Social Studies at RMIT University in Melbourne, Australia.
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