《Profiling ‘Red Bologna’: Between neoliberalisation tendencies and municipal socialist legacy》

打印
作者
Massimo Giovanardi;Maria Giulia Silvagni
来源
CITIES,Vol.110,Issue1,Article 103059
语言
英文
关键字
City marketing;Neoliberalism;Neoliberalisation;Urban policy;Emilian model;Bologna Italy
作者单位
City profile"}]},{"#name":"title","$":{"id":"ti0005"},"_":"Profiling ‘Red Bologna’: Between neoliberalisation tendencies and municipal socialist legacy"}],"floats":[],"footnotes":[],"attachments":[]},"vol-first":"110","vol-iss-suppl-text":"Volume 110","userSettings":{"forceAbstract":false,"creditCardPurchaseAllowed":true,"blockFullTextForAnonymousAccess":false,"disableWholeIssueDownload":false,"preventTransactionalAccess":false,"preventDocumentDelivery":true},"contentType":"JL","crossmark":true,"document-references":76,"freeHtmlGiven":false,"hasChorus":false,"ssoUrls":["//acw.evise.com/SSOCore/update?acw=7d533e5f3fa3004d374b5d4339418d0d6224gxrqa%7C%24%7C06B77292EF976B55A37DAEA64CCA877D5AEA9019276AB921601DC4CE4EFDA8F9661280E71C6D74B39A13A9793A6E90EFC5396AF287DBFF1D3FBA44D1BD4E4F2EB0469A67597464825D387A21AFA2E514&utt=1c21c7ded6da6719cef0afc048b13472206961","//acw.sciencedirect.com/SSOCore/update?acw=7d533e5f3fa3004d374b5d4339418d0d6224gxrqa%7C%24%7C06B77292EF976B55A37DAEA64CCA877D5AEA9019276AB921601DC4CE4EFDA8F9661280E71C6D74B39A13A9793A6E90EFC5396AF287DBFF1D3FBA44D1BD4E4F2EB0469A67597464825D387A21AFA2E514&utt=1c21c7ded6da6719cef0afc048b13472206961","//acw.elsevier.com/SSOCore/update?acw=7d533e5f3fa3004d374b5d4339418d0d6224gxrqa%7C%24%7C06B77292EF976B55A37DAEA64CCA877D5AEA9019276AB921601DC4CE4EFDA8F9661280E71C6D74B39A13A9793A6E90EFC5396AF287DBFF1D3FBA44D1BD4E4F2EB0469A67597464825D387A21AFA2E514&utt=1c21c7ded6da6719cef0afc048b13472206961"],"userProfile":{"departmentName":"ScienceDirect Guests","accessType":"GUEST","accountId":"228598","webUserId":"12975512","accountName":"ScienceDirect Guests","departmentId":"291352","userType":"NORMAL","hasMultipleOrganizations":false},"access":{"openAccess":false,"openArchive":false},"aipType":"none","articleEntitlement":{"entitled":false,"isCasaUser":false,"usageInfo":"(12975512,U|291352,D|228598,A|3,P|2,PL)(SDFE,CON|7d533e5f3fa3004d374b5d4339418d0d6224gxrqa,SSO|ANON_GUEST,ACCESS_TYPE)"},"crawlerInformation":{"canCrawlPDFContent":false,"isCrawler":false},"dates":{"Available online":"23 December 2020","Received":"28 July 2020","Revised":["1 November 2020"],"Accepted":"15 November 2020","Publication date":"1 March 2021"},"displayViewFullText":false,"downloadFullIssue":false,"entitlementReason":"unsubscribed","headerConfig":{"helpUrl":"https://service.elsevier.com/app/home/supporthub/sciencedirect/","contactUrl":"https://service.elsevier.com/app/contact/supporthub/sciencedirect/","userName":"","userEmail":"","orgName":"ScienceDirect Guests","webUserId":"12975512","libraryBanner":{},"shib_regUrl":"","tick_regUrl":"","recentInstitutions":[],"canActivatePersonalization":false,"hasInstitutionalAssociation":false,"hasMultiOrg":false,"userType":"GUEST","userAnonymity":"ANON_GUEST","allowCart":true,"environment":"prod","cdnAssetsHost":"https://sdfestaticassets-us-east-1.sciencedirectassets.com"},"indexTag":true,"isCorpReq":false,"issn":"02642751","issn-primary-formatted":"0264-2751","issRange":"","publication-content":{"noElsevierLogo":false,"imprintPublisher":{"displayName":"Pergamon","id":"67"},"isSpecialIssue":false,"isSampleIssue":false,"transactionsBlocked":false,"publicationOpenAccess":{"oaStatus":"","oaArticleCount":127,"openArchiveStatus":false,"openArchiveArticleCount":0,"openAccessStartDate":"","oaAllowsAuthorPaid":true},"issue-cover":{"attachment":[{"attachment-eid":"1-s2.0-S0264275120X00114-cov200h.gif","file-basename":"cov200h","extension":"gif","filename":"cov200h.gif","ucs-locator":["https://s3-eu-west-1.amazonaws.com/prod-ucs-content-store-eu-west/content/pii:S0264275120X00114/cover/DOWNSAMPLED200/image/gif/24f10df71b9c80e0b05f31f4cbbca2be/cov200h.gif"],"attachment-type":"IMAGE-COVER-H200","filesize":"15844","pixel-height":"200","pixel-width":"150"},{"attachment-eid":"1-s2.0-S0264275120X00114-cov150h.gif","file-basename":"cov150h","extension":"gif","filename":"cov150h.gif","ucs-locator":["https://s3-eu-west-1.amazonaws.com/prod-ucs-content-store-eu-west/content/pii:S0264275120X00114/cover/DOWNSAMPLED/image/gif/ac7e2de74be3d2f1d709e4abb6a2278c/cov150h.gif"],"attachment-type":"IMAGE-COVER-H150","filesize":"10177","pixel-height":"150","pixel-width":"113"}]},"smallCoverUrl":"https://ars.els-cdn.com/content/image/S02642751.gif","title":"cities","contentTypeCode":"JL","sourceOpenAccess":false,"publicationCoverImageUrl":"https://ars.els-cdn.com/content/image/1-s2.0-S0264275120X00114-cov150h.gif"},"useEnhancedReader":true,"volRange":"110","titleString":"Profiling ‘Red Bologna’: Between neoliberalisation tendencies and municipal socialist legacy","shouldShowAmLink":false,"onAbstractAllowlist":true,"renderingMode":"Abstract","isAbstract":true,"isContentVisible":false,"ajaxLinks":{"citingArticles":true,"referredToBy":true,"toc":true,"recommendations":true}},"authors":{"content":[{"#name":"author-group","$":{"id":"ag0005"},"$$":[{"#name":"author","$":{"author-id":"S0264275120314074-773a0c83e822def078f2d7d6b3266659","id":"au0005"},"$$":[{"#name":"given-name","_":"Massimo;Department for Life Quality Studies, Centre for Advanced Studies in Tourism (CAST), University of Bologna, IT, Italy;Centre for Advanced Studies in Tourism (CAST), University of Bologna, IT, Italy;Department for Life Quality Studies, Centre for Advanced Studies in Tourism (CAST), University of Bologna, IT, Italy;Centre for Advanced Studies in Tourism (CAST), University of Bologna, IT, Italy
摘要
This city profile frames Bologna as an appropriate context in which to elaborate reflections that bring to the same table representatives of two schools of urban scholarship: the advocates of the neoliberalisation thesis, who are predominantly Anglo-American (e.g., Theodore and Brenner, 2002; Brenner, Peck and Theodore, 2010), and those who criticise the vague and unreflective application of the concept (e.g., Pinson and Morel Journel, 2016; Le Galès, 2016), who are mainly based in continental/Southern Europe. The medium-sized Italian city of “Red Bologna” (Harvey, 2007, p. 12) is chosen because of its municipal socialist legacy, characterised by a traditional communist political subculture and a hybrid form of cooperative, market-based territorial development called the “Emilian Model”. The paper seeks to gauge some of the main contemporary challenges that the city has faced, most of which have been exacerbated by the sudden boost in tourist arrivals and the quick opening up to the visitor economy over the last decade. Ultimately, the paper explores how European third-tier cities can incorporate entrepreneurial orientations and international policy discourses into existing governance structures and modes of development while exhibiting signs of distinct and competing ideologies (Shepherd, 2018).