2014
DOI: 10.1111/anti.12114
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By Any Means Necessary: Urban Regeneration and the “State of Exception” in Glasgow's Commonwealth Games 2014

Abstract: When compulsory purchase for urban regeneration is combined with a sporting mega-event, we have an archetypal example of what Giorgio Agamben called the "state of exception". Through a study of compulsory purchase orders (CPOs) on the site of the Athletes' Village for Glasgow's 2014 Commonwealth Games, we expose CPOs as a classed tool mobilised to violently displace working class neighbourhoods. In doing so, we show how a fictionalised mantra of "necessity" combines neoliberal growth logics with their obscene … Show more

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Cited by 69 publications
(48 citation statements)
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“…Glasgow is an archetypical post‐industrial city that has undergone both deindustrialization and various attempts at regenerating and reimagining the city over the past three decades (Cumbers et al ; Helms and Cumbers ; MacLeod ). While elements of the city council are keen to pursue a more “green” agenda, in the context of a broader UK politics of austerity and state retrenchment, a more dominant neoliberal agenda of aggressive property‐led accumulation continues to drive Glasgow's political elites (Gray and Porter ). Despite these unpromising political and economic circumstances, as we demonstrate, community gardening activities do offer scope for different kinds of citizenship and politics.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Glasgow is an archetypical post‐industrial city that has undergone both deindustrialization and various attempts at regenerating and reimagining the city over the past three decades (Cumbers et al ; Helms and Cumbers ; MacLeod ). While elements of the city council are keen to pursue a more “green” agenda, in the context of a broader UK politics of austerity and state retrenchment, a more dominant neoliberal agenda of aggressive property‐led accumulation continues to drive Glasgow's political elites (Gray and Porter ). Despite these unpromising political and economic circumstances, as we demonstrate, community gardening activities do offer scope for different kinds of citizenship and politics.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Indeed, the 2014 Glasgow Games illustrated the relationship between such events and a range of political and sociocultural issues which demand further academic analysis, including the impact on displaced local populations (Gray and Mooney, 2011;Gray and Porter, 2015;Paton et al, 2012), LGBTI and human rights (Harris and Skillen, 2016;Jarvie, 2017), and public health outcomes (Clark andKearns, 2015, 2016;Matheson, 2010;McCartney et al, 2012;Stewart and Rayner, 2016).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Gentrification is no mere process of 'neighbourhood change' nor is it a process driven by 'hipsters'. Institutionalised as urban policy, gentrification is a 'global urban strategy' (Smith, 1996) against decline wrought by deindustrialisation, emulated from Bilbao to Mumbai, from dockside developments to mega-sporting events (Atkinson and Bridge, 2005;Hackworth, 2002;Gray and Porter, 2014;Watt, 2013). This diverse character of state-led gentrification has been defined by Hackworth (2002) as the creation of space for the more affluent user.…”
Section: State-led Gentrification In Austerity Times: New Urban Classmentioning
confidence: 99%