The public wealth of cities and regions?
 
Call for Papers and Panellists
 
American Association of Geographers Annual Meeting 2018 New Orleans, USA, 10-14 
April 2018
 
Organizers
Peter O'Brien and Andy Pike (Centre for Urban and Regional Development Studies 
(CURDS), Newcastle University) Andrew Cumbers (University of Glasgow)
 
Sponsors
Economic Geography Specialty Group
 

Outline

Amidst continued fiscal crisis and austerity and efforts to stimulate growth, 
address major societal challenges and expand public service reform, national 
and local government actors are being compelled into considering how best to 
manage public assets. A series of variegated institutional arrangements of 
public ownership are emerging in different places and at different geographical 
scales, seeking to reform the use, management and ownership of public assets - 
particularly land, property and infrastructure. Against growing concerns about 
the 'under-utilisation' of public assets deemed 'surplus', an ongoing fiscal 
squeeze and exhortations to become more 'business-like' and 'commercial', 
sub-national and local governments are developing new forms of public ownership 
and agency in the search for new assets and sources of financial revenue and 
capital. 

As yet, the socially and spatially uneven unfolding of these new concerns with 
public assets by national and local states has received limited attention. 
Definitional, conceptual and theoretical issues bedevil our understanding of 
public assets. The conventional economic frameworks of value and valuation are 
being troubled by social and environmental claims and dimensions. Yet, public 
assets are also being subject to financialisation and new financial instruments 
and practices. 

Political-economic debate and deliberation about public assets and the role of 
the state are intensifying. With some interests bemoaning the "phony war" 
(Detter and Fölster 2015) between public ownership and privatization, calling 
for the improvement of "the quality of public asset governance" via 
"professional wealth managers working with a measure of political independence 
in national wealth funds" (2015: 1, 7), and calling for the creation of new 
institutional vehicles at arms-length from central national and city/regional 
governments in 'Urban' or 'Regional Wealth Funds'. While other interests are 
questioning public asset sell-offs due to their risk of net losses to the 
taxpayer and loss of future long term revenues, and arguing for the regional 
and local state as a legitimate and efficient owner and manager of public 
assets.

These sessions seek to convene researchers engaged in conceptual, theoretical, 
empirical and policy work in this area to address these and other issues 
relating to the public wealth of cities and regions internationally. 

We very much welcome abstracts which connect to one of more the following 
themes, in addition to those that may address other, related themes:  

.       Defining and conceptualizing public assets

.       Conceptualising and theorizing the role of the state in relation to 
public assets

.       The financialisation of public assets

.       Value and the valuation of public assets

.       The rise of 'commercial councils' and new forms of municipal 
entrepreneurialism

.       New and existing models, institutions, strategies and governance 
arrangements for public asset ownership and management

.       The politics of public assets and contestation of privatization and 
reform

.       Public assets and urban and regional policy


Papers and panel contributions
The aim is to organize several sessions for papers, depending on the quality 
and quantity of submissions, and a panel discussion session. Please email ideas 
for papers with a 250 word abstract and/or panel contributions with a 100 word 
outline to Peter O'Brien (peter.o'br...@ncl.ac.uk), Andy Pike 
(andy.p...@ncl.ac.uk) and Andrew Cumbers (andrew.cumb...@glasgow.ac.uk>) by 6 
October 2017.

Andy Pike
Henry Daysh Professor of Regional Development Studies Director Centre for Urban 
and Regional Development Studies (CURDS) Newcastle University Newcastle Upon 
Tyne
NE1 7RU
UK
Tel: +44 (0)191 208 8011
Fax: +44 (0)191 208 7741
E-mail: andy.p...@ncl.ac.uk
Web: http://www.ncl.ac.uk/curds/people/profile/andy.pike

New book: Local and Regional Development (2nd Edition)
https://www.routledge.com/Local-and-Regional-Development/Pike-Rodriguez-Pose-Tomaney/p/book/9781138785724

CURDS 40th Anniversary
http://www.ncl.ac.uk/curds/40th/

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