Urban Design as Technology of (Counter‐) Democratic Security Politics
How does urban design become consciously mobilized as a technology of security politics, and how does a reflexive perspective on this use offers productive research avenues? Focusing on the two case studies of Bogotá and Zürich, former ISTP researcher Jonas Hagmann and ISTP PhD candidate David Kostenwein provide new insights into these topics.
Abstract
How does architecture operate as a security technology? This contribution sets out how reflexive security research and urban studies approach built environments as political inclusion and exclusion instruments. It first presents how this role is understood to operate in the respective scholarly fields, and then illustrates its ambivalent operation with two mini‐case studies centering on Bogotá and Zürich. In doing so, the contribution seeks to familiarize readers with architecture‐oriented reflexive political analysis, and to draw out main lines of further investigation.
- Article: external page Urban Design as Technology of (Counter‐) Democratic Security Politics
- Journal: Swiss Political Science Review
- Authors: Jonas Hagmann and David Kostenwein