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ECONOMIC FLOWS, SPATIAL FOLDS AND INTRA‐URBAN BORDERS: REFLECTIONS ON CITY CENTRE REDEVELOPMENT PLANS FROM A EUROPEAN BORDER STUDIES PERSPECTIVE
Author(s) -
SPIERINGS BAS
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
tijdschrift voor economische en sociale geografie
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.766
H-Index - 55
eISSN - 1467-9663
pISSN - 0040-747X
DOI - 10.1111/j.1467-9663.2011.00699.x
Subject(s) - redevelopment , economic geography , consumption (sociology) , regional science , perspective (graphical) , profitability index , gentrification , political science , economy , sociology , business , geography , economics , economic growth , social science , law , finance , artificial intelligence , computer science
The aim of recent redevelopment plans and projects for European city centres is to remove intra‐urban ‘borders’ and thereby to promote the profitability of cities. Consumer mobility within city centres is encouraged to facilitate flows of consumption capital and generate consumer spending. Contextualised by international border studies and related EU integration policies, the Van Heekplein redevelopment project in Enschede, the Netherlands, is discussed here to scrutinise the redevelopment focus on economic ‘flows’ in city centres. The paper brings to the fore how European border studies speak to city centre plans and their redevelopment focus – resulting in a critique for ignoring the social production of borders. To achieve a more comprehensive understanding of consumer (im)mobility in city centres and processes of bordering, the paper proposes a perspective on borders as spatial ‘folds’. Analysing four types of folding – the folding of ‘bodies’, ‘forces’, ‘knowledge’ and ‘the outside’– provides both a much more dynamic and kaleidoscopic picture of city centres and their users and a more comprehensive understanding of border perceptions and experiences and related practices of shoppers. Such an analytical perspective and approach not only seems of interest for border‐related studies and policies at the urban level but also at the European level.

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