Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/2440/42305
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Type: Journal article
Title: The Role of Urban Governance in Re-constructing Place, Economic Function and Social Relations in Urban Waterfront Regeneration: The Case of Port Adelaide, South Australia
Author: Oakley, S.
Citation: Space and Polity, 2007; 11(3):279-295
Publisher: Routledge
Issue Date: 2007
ISSN: 1356-2576
1470-1235
Abstract: The Port Adelaide waterfront is symbolic of a distinctive form of entrepreneurial urban governance that emphasises specific forms of capital accumulation. As in waterfront projects elsewhere in Australia and overseas, depicting Port Adelaide as an 'urban problem' has been critical in legitimating the public-private market-based approach to regenerating the waterfront site. This paper outlines how the ascendancy of urban governance in Australian political sensibility is coinciding with and facilitating a particular urban form in waterfront developments. This involves transforming the Port's disused industrial and maritime landscape from a site of production to one of consumption. This urban makeover signifies a radical reconstitution of place identity, economic function and social relations. This paper also investigates the impact on the pre-existing social structure, built form and economic activity base of the location and suggests that the potential for this significant waterfront project is not confined to the re-imagining of the discursive identity of the place but extends to meeting wider institutional metropolitan and regional planning objectives.
Keywords: Local Government
Geography: Political Geography
Human Geography: Political Geography
Description: © 2008 Informa plc
DOI: 10.1080/13562570701811585
Published version: http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13562570701811585
Appears in Collections:Aurora harvest
Centre for Housing, Urban and Regional Planning publications
Gender Studies and Social Analysis publications

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