A TOP-DOWN URBAN REVOLUTION [In These Times]
| By Dean, Amy B | |
| Proquest LLC |
Will working people have any say in the new neoliberal city?
AT A TIME WHEN FEDERAL lawmaking is at a nearstandstill, with Republicans in
For the neoliberal camp, the future of the American city is clear: In the coming decade, mayors, business elites, philanthropists and university presidents must build metropolitan economies based on innovation, competitiveness and growth. Unfortunately, something is missing from this picture: working people, and the labor unions and grassroots community groups that advocate for them. This omission is consequential. Absent their voices, the chances are slim of creating urban growth whose benefits are broadly shared.
A debate about the future of the metropolis has been kindled by
The question is not whether we need economic growth in cities. The question is whether Americans will grow together or grow apart. In failing to bring grassroots interests to the table in imagining a new urban future, Katz and Bradley-as well as cities such as
Metropolises ascendant
Katz and Bradley argue, correctly, that cities are the engines of todays economy. Using case studies, they point out that metropolitan regions have unique, often healthy economic ecosystems that are fast becoming independent actors in the global economy. They write:
Metros dominate because they embody concentration and agglomeration-networks of innovative firms, talented workers, risk-taking entrepreneurs, and supportive institutions and associations that cluster together in metropolitan areas and coproduce economic performance and progress. There is, in essence, no American (or Chinese or German or Brazilian) economy; rather, a national economy is a network of metropolitan economies.
In addition to being economically vital, metropolitan regions are politically significant. In contrast to the highly politicized environment in
Cities and metropolitan areas think in terms of networks that act together to achieve common goals and encourage collaboration and teamwork. They have a different disposition toward progress and continuous improvement. There, good policy is good politics-for individuals seeking to gain community trust and commitment. ...
But Katz and Bradley's view of who will rescue our economy has a decidedly neoliberal tint. True, in the current political climate it is unlikely that large-scale federal investment will swoop in to save cities. In this absence, Katz and Bradley see elite networks of political leaders, philanthropists, businesses and academic institutions as the heroes: a definition of leadership that smacks of paternalism. Katz and Bradley do at times include heads of unions and vague "civic organizations" when listing the leaders of these metropolitan revolutions, and speak of "participatory democracy" and an "inversion of the hierarchy of power" toward the people "closest to the ground." But labor and grassroots leaders are largely absent from their case studies and from their vision for the full realization of their metropolitan revolution. By positioning this cadre of business chiefs, university administrators and foundation executives as more "reasoned" and "pragmatic" than grassroots groups like Occupy, Katz and Bradley not only sideline democratic movements in favor of corporatedominated urban planning, but ignore critical lessons from recent decades of regional development.
The
The invisible worker
Not surprisingly, in Katz and Bradley's scheme of "innovative firms, talented workers, risk-taking entrepreneurs, and supportive institutions and associations," the workers have the smallest and fuzziest role. In 2010, Katz was featured in a web video for Time that showed what innovations would look like in cities. As Katz spoke about how metro regions around the world are competing on the global stage, sped-up footage showed cars zipping through the city night, cranes shifting cargo around a dock like giant industrious insects and, in perhaps the most telling clip, an auto manufacturing facility in which a car was being assembled by robots. This illustrates the flaw in Katz and Bradley's premise: In the new neoliberal metropolis, working people are invisible. Ordinary citizens are the acted-upon, not the actors.
At best, Katz and Bradley want workers to bootstrap themselves into being more skilled than they already are. Of course, education is an essential public good. But it is no substitute for insisting that all jobs in our economy-not merely those filled by high-echelon knowledge workers-provide living wages and allow people to enter the middle class.
This tension plays out in Katz and Bradley's case studies. In their chapter on
By contrast, in the world outside Katz and Bradley's neoliberal bubble, unions, tenants' associations, interfaith coalitions and community action groups are tools that metro dwellers use to leverage their power and claim some of the resources needed for families to enter the middle class. In
Power from below
Unlike Katz and Bradley, labor and community organizers have emphasized creating growth that is sustainable and broadly shared. Community-labor coalitions have led the way in the regional development debate by demanding that projects that receive public support (through zoning variances, tax abatements and government subsidies) produce concrete public gains-in the form of living wage jobs or Community Benefit Agreements for those most affected by new developments.
Though Katz and Bradley do briefly acknowledge that "poverty and inequality are likely to act as a drag on economic growth," the Metropolitan Revolution model avoids any serious discussion of sharing gains equitably, accepting growth itself as an adequate goal and implicitly endorsing the proverbial- and demonstrably inaccurate-view that a rising tide lifts all boats.
Katz and Bradley's analysis of
Katz and Bradley accurately describe the type of cross-county collaboration among elected officials needed for regional policy-making. But in their focus on Hickenlooper as the central protagonist in
While the mayors of
We should insist that elected officials cooperate across county borders to develop metro infrastructure. And we should laud local charities for offering social service supports not provided by the state. But charity and paternalism are no substitute for empowerment.
The successes in
Networks of elites cannot succeed in lifting all boats without combating the persistent inequality in cities, which Katz and Bradley see no pressing need to address. Nor do they see how unions, transit ridership groups, tenants' rights organizations, publicschool parents and low-wage service workers can be, and have been, a critical part of the solution. The result is a failure of imagination that leaves a vast swath of metropolitan populations invisible-and that conceals some of the most interesting and exciting organizing breakthroughs of the past two decades.
5 CITIES IN THE MIDST OF A NEOLIBERAL TAKEOVER
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5 CITIES ON THE VERGE OF A PROGRESSIVE UPSWING
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| Copyright: | (c) 2013 Institute for Public Affairs, Inc. |
| Wordcount: | 2301 |



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