Deconstructing the urban viewpoint: Exploring uneven regional development with Nancy Fraser’s notion of justice
Journal article, 2024

Uneven regional development fomented by city-centric growth agendas generates significant challenges for regional peripheries. Placing regional margins and other plural geographies at the center, in this article we apply a normative framework based on justice theory to uncover the dominance of urban viewpoints in urban regional development policy. Departing from Nancy Fraser’s three-dimensional justice theory, we provide a deconstruction of city-centrism by illustrating how regional disparities in two regions in Sweden are not only reproduced by economic maldistribution but also by political misrepresentation and cultural misrecognition. By doing so, we illustrate the fruitfulness of applying a normative justice framework to create a broader understanding of factors that contribute to the political production of uneven regional development and need to be addressed if a transformative and progressive change is to occur.

recognition

urban viewpoint

Sweden

Fraser

redistribution

uneven regional development

representation

misframing

justice

Author

Kristina Grange

Chalmers, Architecture and Civil Engineering, Urban Design and Planning

Nils Björling

Chalmers, Architecture and Civil Engineering, Urban Design and Planning

Lina Olsson

Malmö university

Julia Fredriksson

Chalmers, Architecture and Civil Engineering, Urban Design and Planning

Urban Studies

0042-0980 (ISSN) 1360-063X (eISSN)

Vol. In Press

Politicising uneven regional development: Towards socially responsible geographies

Formas (2017-00953), 2018-01-01 -- 2021-04-30.

Subject Categories

Social and Economic Geography

Pedagogy

DOI

10.1177/00420980231214502

More information

Latest update

2/2/2024 9