Fresh from Motown – A Shrinking City as an Incubator for Social and Creative Start-ups

by Valentin Schipfer

 I have always been fascinated by shrinking cities like Detroit. I had thought this was because of their mysteriousness, their myths and the thousands of pictures of ruins in the internet. But last week’s book presentation by Katja Kullmann (author of the book “Rasende Ruinen – Wie Detroit sich neu erfindet”, Rushing ruins – Reinventing Detroit) demonstrated that there is more behind it than just decay. Quite contrary to that these cities become places of new forms of cooperation, reorganization and alternative economies. I’ll present here a summary of one of her book chapters, two local art initiatives and a special urban gardening project. Continue reading

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The Zabbaleen – Functional Informal Waste Management in Cairo – Part II

By Jakob Hebsaker and Renard Teipelke*

In our first article, we introduced the waste management system in Cairo. Now, we want to shed light on recent developments and further implications for the future.

The waste management system in Cairo knows three important groups: the Wahis (license owners and fee collectors), the Zabbaleen (waste collectors and sorters), the Mo’allimin (recycling processors and resellers; former Zabbaleen). Focusing on the two opposing groups – the Wahis and the Zabbaleen – one has to underscore that the Wahis are an influential, well-educated group in the Cairene society, while the Zabbaleen are socially marginalized. Most of the 60,000 Zabbaleen are Coptic Christians and are thus part of a religious-social minority in Egypt. However, the recycling business is profitable for all stakeholders and even the Zabbaleen are in a relatively better position than other low-income groups in Cairo. Nevertheless, because of their dependence of the Wahis and their marginalized role in the Egyptian society, the Zabbaleen have only low social and economic capital as well as little political leverage. Furthermore, they are living in currently six informal neighborhoods (slum settlements), such as Manshiyat Nasser (aka Garbage City) in the outskirts of Cairo at the base of Mokattam Hill.

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The New Scottisch Cities Alliance: Effective Collaboration for Prosperity and Job Creation

Map of Scotland - showing the 7 main cities

by Kenneth Wardrop

There has been increasing debate in Scotland over the past couple of years about the need for the country to develop an effective urban development policy.  This led to the coming together of the major cities in a new collaboration to raise the profile of the role of the cities as drivers of the country’s economy.  It also resulted in November 2011 in the Scottish Government, working with the Scottish Cities of Glasgow, Edinburgh, Aberdeen, Dundee, Inverness and Stirling, and the organisation Scottish Council for Development and Industry (SCDI http://www.scdi.org.uk/ ), publishing the report ‘Scotland’s Cities: Delivering for Scotland’  http://www.scotland.gov.uk/Resource/Doc/365367/0124252.pdf. Continue reading

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Co-working in Athens: Loft2Work

by Ares Kalandides

It is a strange place, this Zen haven in the middle of Athens. You leave the heavy traffic of Iera Odos behind you, to find yourself in the tranquillity of the Loft2Work, one of the few co-working spaces in town.  I have written in the past about the ways that creative professions are changing the way we work. Both time and space seem to be reconfigured to adapt to new working habits. I think there are basically two major changes here that are bound to influence the way we thing of and design our cities: Continue reading

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The Zabbaleen – Functional Informal Waste Management in Cairo – Part I

By Jakob Hebsaker and Renard Teipelke*

Waste management might belong to those urban issues that are best managed when we do not recognize them. Once we are complaining about dirty streets or overflowing trash cans, we are reminded of hidden waste management being a true backbone of the urban system. In Cairo, Egypt, the waste management system has its roots in the 1880s. Former oasis inhabitants, the Wahis, were migrating into Cairo and started to earn their living by picking up the waste of every household and selling it to public baths which used the waste for heating. After oil heating replaced the waste burning in the 1920s, the Wahis began to sell the waste to Coptic immigrants from the South of Egypt which used the organic waste of the trash for feeding their pigs. Continue reading

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Exonyms: enemy of uniform place brands abroad?

Finland Suomi Tshirt

An Exonym (Finland) and Endonym (Suomi) on a tourist T-shirt

by Hans Pul
For building and maintaining brands, uniformity in communication is crucial and confusion needs to be avoided. However, many places have different names in different languages. München is Munich in English, London is Londra in Italian, while Mailand is German for Milano. More extremely, some place names look and sound completely different in other languages, some of the most prominent examples being Suomi* (Finland), Hellas (Greece) and Nippon (Japan). In short, there are more exonyms (foreign language names for geographical features) than places out there. How does this affect place branding efforts abroad?

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Reporting the Eurozone’s Crisis: Lessons from the Greek Front (*)

Reblogged from Yanis Varoufakis:

Over the past two years, the economic crisis that has engulfed Greece has also thrust me in front of the microphones and note pads of the myriad journalists who descended upon Athens to report on the unfolding drama. In this sense, I have not only been witnessing the evolution of Greece’s (and the eurozone’s) meltdown but also the struggle of the world’s media to make sense of it. 

Read more… 2,214 more words

Although this piece by economist Yanis Varoufakis is not directly linked to place branding, I find that it is an excellent account of how and why country stereotypes are produced, what the role of story-telling and of journalists is and what consequeces this may have.

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Implementing a Place Branding strategy: Bogotá UNESCO City of Music

Rock al Parque, Bogotá

by Ares Kalandides

Last month Bogotá was designated “City of Music” by the UNESCO, and it now participates in the growing network of “Creative Cities” that counts 30 cities from all over the word – 5 of which are Cities of Music (the others being Bologna, Sevilla, Glasgow and Ghent).  This is how UNESCO describes the decision:

“Bogota is recognized foremost for its fast growing musical sector and dynamic music scene as a major centre of musical creation and activity in Latin America.

In accordance with the mission of the Creative Cities Network, the city promotes music as a tool for socio-economic improvement and cultural diversity. With its unique profile as a cultural exchange hub on a national and regional level, Bogota is expected to strongly increase international cooperation opportunities for the Network. Continue reading

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Copenhagen really is wonderful, for so many reasons | World news | The Observer

 

Copenhagen really is wonderful, for so many reasons | World news | The Observer.

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