Fwd: Island Cities and Urban Archipelagos

Call for Papers: 'Island Cities and Urban Archipelagos'
21-25 October 2014, Copenhagen, Denmark
http://www.islanddynamics.org/islandcities.html

International conference exploring the culture, economy, and government of island cities worldwide.

Keynote Speakers
- Saskia Sassen (Columbia University)
- Jon Pierre (University of Gothenburg)
- Godfrey Baldacchino (University of Malta)
- Jonathan Pugh (Newcastle University)
- Christian Wichmann Matthiessen (University of Copenhagen)
- Brenda S.A. Yeoh (National University of Singapore)
- Ilan Kelman (University College London).

'Island Cities and Urban Archipelagos' explores how island status influences urban development, common attributes of island cities worldwide, and the opportunities that islandness presents for developing urban cultures and economies. It will also consider how islands and archipelagos can be used as conceptual tools for understanding urban development more broadly.

Islands are often associated with peripherality, yet they are also important sites of urban development. Many major cities have developed wholly or partially on small islands or archipelagos. Physical separation from the mainland and spatial limitations along with a maritime tradition can encourage the transport of products and ideas, improved defence infrastructure, construction of social capital, consolidation of political power, formation of vibrant cultures, and concentration of population. Some such island-based cities were located on river islands and have since expanded far beyond their original borders (for example, Paris and Mumbai) while others are still strongly associated with their island cores (for example, Singapore and Manhattan).

Major population centres located on larger, primarily rural islands and archipelagos (for example, Reykjavik and Manila) represent another type of island city. Each of these cities is affected not just by the dynamics at work in urban areas in general but also by the special functions it gains from acting as a metropolis that provides goods and services to rural island hinterlands.

The conference will feature presentations on a variety of subjects relating to urban island culture, government, and economy. A variety of fields and disciplines will be covered, including anthropology, archaeology, architecture, arts and design, business, film, folklore, history, literature, planning, political science, public administration, sociology, and tourism. Presentations may concern cases from individual cities or take a comparative approach to understanding what it means to be an urban island.

Deadline for Call for Papers: 31 May 2014
Enquiries: icua@islanddynamics.org

Sponsored by: Island Dynamics

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