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(Im)mobile and (Un)successful? A policy mobilities approach to New Orleans’s residential security taxing districts
Author(s) -
Malone Aaron
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
environment and planning c: politics and space
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.109
H-Index - 69
eISSN - 2399-6552
pISSN - 2399-6544
DOI - 10.1177/2399654418779822
Subject(s) - mobilities , centrality , scope (computer science) , elite , urban policy , public policy , relevance (law) , political science , public administration , sociology , urban planning , politics , law , engineering , combinatorics , civil engineering , computer science , social science , mathematics , programming language
Policy mobilities scholars critically analyze the processes of assemblage, mobilization, and mutation that shape policy circuits, but have been critiqued for an over-emphasis on successful and mobile cases. This paper adds to a growing effort to diversify the empirical scope of the field through an example that blurs the boundaries of mobility/immobility and success/failure. I examine residential security taxing districts, which are derived from the common business improvement district model but which in their specifics are unique to New Orleans. Security districts are quasi-public entities established within elite urban enclaves to collect taxes to fund neighborhood security patrols. First, I analyze the model’s rapid spread among the city’s neighborhoods, demonstrating the relevance of the policy mobilities framework in a case of intra -urban mobilization. Second, I explore why the model has not spread to other cities, particularly given New Orleans’s centrality as a site for neoliberal policy experimentation in the post-Katrina era. These post-disaster interventions applied preexisting policy prescriptions and were driven by outside experts, while the city’s own neoliberal experiments were ignored. Troubling the association of mobility and success, I conclude that this immobility should not be considered failure so much as anonymity.

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