DEADLINE TO SUBMIT AN ABSTRACT MONDAY 4TH JULY 2011


*Regional Association One Day Winter Conference, **Friday 25th November 2011
London, UK*

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*Contested Regions: Territorial Politics and Policy*

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*To register go to: http://www.regional-studies-assoc.ac.uk/*

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*CALL FOR PAPERS*

*Conference themes:***

Contributions are invited which focus primarily, although not necessarily
exclusively, on one or more of the following themes:



·         Remapping of  regions and localities and the implications of this
for multilevel governance, policy success or policy failure;

·         Global comparative perspectives on models of regional and
metropolitan governance;

·          New sites and forms of regional conflict: inter-regional, intra-
regional, and
in-between regional;

·         The role of territorial politics in regional strategies for
economic development and state redistribution;

·         Cooperation, disputes and political struggles around borders
/boundaries/ sovereignty;

·         The politics of local and regional infrastructures; models and
practices of decentralisation and the impacts of this on territorial justice


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The last two decades have been dominated by discourses affirming a
resurgence of regions as the primary spatial scale at which competing
political and economic agendas are convened, not least those pertaining to
increasing competitiveness, while simultaneously tackling entrenched
inequalities, encouraging progressive planning and enabling piecemeal
democratic rights. Part and parcel of this discourse has been a series of
well documented territorial conflicts, contests and struggles – most notably
centered on national and sub-national disputes around notions of *inter alia
* identity, sovereignty, borders, legitimacy and democracy. Alongside this,
however, we are seeing a growing appreciation of an alternative set of
territorial politics; one which is leading researchers to focus on new *loci
*, and to engage with new forms, of *intra-regional* disparities and
dispute. This has become increasingly acute *vis-à-vis* a wider context
combining accelerating processes of global economic integration with
geographical differentiation, and as rapid urbanization now sees more than
50% of the world’s population living in cities. On the one hand
globalization is thus fuelling claims of a resurgence of cities as drivers
of competitiveness. Yet, on the other hand, substantive expressions of
accelerated urbanization are increasingly challenging existing urban
economic infrastructures and urban-regional governance, particularly as
metropolitan landscapes stretch far beyond their traditional territorial
boundaries. The extraordinarily rapid urbanization underway in China offers
a vivid example of the challenges posed.



Stirred into action by these developments, the first decade of this century
has seen a whole body of research outlining the emergence of a new and
critically important geographical and institutional phenomenon on the world
stage – the metropolitan city-region. Synonymous with much of this work has
been a series of normative claims relating to how metropolitan regions are:



1) The basic motors of the national economies within which they are located;


2) Fundamental to economic and social revitalisation; and

3) Vital for establishing effective planning and policymaking.



In the USA this has precipitated calls for a ‘New Regionalism’ to
consolidate fragmenting governance at the metropolitan level. But this is
only part of the story. For the pace of change – particularly in relation to
their size, scale and number– is leaving these pivotal societal and
political-economic formations reliant on increasingly outdated and
inadequate institutional structures, infrastructures, territorialities,
statutory frameworks and supports. And herein rests the tension: as the
demand for more ‘appropriate’, widely understood to mean more flexible,
networked and smart forms of urban and regional planning and governance
arrangements increases, new *loci* and/or expressions of territorial
cooperation and conflict are emerging around questions to do with increased
competitiveness, new economic developments, infrastructure, collective
provision of services, and governmentalised re-mappings of state space.



In this context then it is timely to ask some searching questions about
these new intra-regional territorial dynamics and politics, to begin the
process of developing appropriate vocabularies for mapping and
conceptualising the transforming metropolitan economic, political and social
landscape, and to explore notable successes and failures in response to the
profound practical challenges. The Regional Studies Association Winter
Conference 2011 on *Contested Regions *presents an opportunity to discuss
and debate these important issues, to establish the need and nature of
future research imperatives in this field, and to address the concerns, and
challenges confronting practitioners and policymakers.



The conference organizers are keen to attract papers and sessions which
address a broad research and policy agenda, including contributions from any
discipline which can offer relevant insights at local and regional levels.
Papers which are collaborative, international or multi-disciplinary are
especially welcome.



*Programme *

The day will consist of both parallel workshop sessions and plenary
sessions.



*Plenary Speakers*

*Morning Session:*

·         *Spaces of collective provision: ‘old’ territorial politics in the
‘new’ economy?*

*Professor Andy Jonas, University of Hull*

·         *Suburban governance and the regional question: the Canadian
perspective*

*Professor Roger Keil, York University, Canada*

·         *Regional complexity, governance and the region – Problematizing
‘thick’ and ‘thin’ territories*

*Professor Anssi Paasi, Academy of Finland & University of Oulu*

*Afternoon Session:*

·         *Political geographies and the public realm*

*Professor Kevin Morgan, Cardiff University*

·         *Relational approaches to regions and the place of politics*

*Professor Allan Cochrane, Open University*

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*Target Audience*

The conference is open to all: academics, policy makers and practitioners.



*Submission Details*

Please submit offers of papers in the form of 400 word abstracts through the
Regional Studies Association on-line conference portal by Monday 4th July
2011. Your *MS* Word file should contain your name, telephone, fax and
e-mail details. To submit go
https://eiemea.certain.com/rsa/getdemo.ei?id=1010024&s=_39K0KNBWM and follow
the *Winter Conference Call for Papers 2011* link. Proposals will be
considered by the Conference Programme Committee against the criteria of
originality and interest, subject balance and geographical spread.**



*Prices:* RSA Student Member £45, RSA Early Career/Associate Member £95and
RSA Individual/Corporate Member £170.

*Non-members*: Student £85, Early Career/Associate (retired) £160 and
Individual/Corporate £225



*Local Organisers: *John Harrison: *j.harris...@lboro.ac.uk*, Martin Jones:
*m...@aber.ac.uk*, and Gordon MacLeod; *gordon.macl...@durham.ac.uk*



*RSA Organiser*: Elizabeth Mitchell: *elizabeth.mitch...@rsa-ls.ac.uk*



Regional Studies Association, PO Box 2058, Seaford, BN25 4QU, UK, Tel: +44
(0)1323 899 698, Fax: +44 (0)1323 899 798

Email: eve...@rsa-ls.ac.uk, www.regional-studies-assoc.ac.uk,

Reg. Charity No. 1084165, Reg. in England & Wales No. 4116288, VAT No. 393
7705 16





Kind Regards



Elizabeth Mitchell

Conference & Membership Officer

Regional Studies Association

PO Box 2058 Seaford BN25 4QU

tel: 0044 (0) 1323 899 698

fax: 0044 (0) 1323 899 798

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