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Post-Fordist transformation, the sustainability concept and social relations with nature: a case study of the Hamburg region

✍ Scribed by Sybille Bauriedl; Markus Wissen


Publisher
Taylor and Francis Group
Year
2002
Tongue
English
Weight
164 KB
Volume
4
Category
Article
ISSN
1523-908X

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✦ Synopsis


Following the United Nations Conference on Environment and Development, the concept of sustainability in general and of urban sustainability in particular has become increasingly significant in the course of the 1990s. Even if the environmental problems of cities are far from being solved, one can interpret this development as a change in the relationship between society and nature on both a discursive and a material level. At the same time the transition from Fordism to post-Fordism has given rise to new forms of urban entrepreneurialism, with an absolute priority to economic competitiveness on the one hand and sharpened social conflicts on the other. Looking at the case of the Hamburg region, the article discusses the interaction of these processes. Contrary to the understanding of sustainability as a broadly accepted policy goal it conceptualizes sustainability as a terrain of conflict. As such, we will argue, the sustainability concept and the underlying change in social relations with nature contribute to containing the contradictions of capitalist societalization, which in the transition to post-Fordism have become more visible again.