E-ISSN: 1309-6915
Volume : 19 Issue : 2 Year : 2024
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Diverse geographies of urban crisis: A comparative analysis of Egypt, India and Türkiye [Megaron]
Megaron. 2024; 19(2): 219-230 | DOI: 10.14744/megaron.2024.87846

Diverse geographies of urban crisis: A comparative analysis of Egypt, India and Türkiye

Mehmet Penpecioğlu1, Mustafa Kemal Bayırbağ2
1Department of City and Regional Planning, İzmir Institute of Technology, İzmir, Türkiye
2Department of Political Science and Public Administration, Middle East Technical University, Ankara, Türkiye

The article concentrates on the reasons behind, and consequences of, the post-2008 urban crises experienced in the southern geographies of capitalism. It does so through a comparative analysis of three cases, namely India, Egypt, and Türkiye. The methodological approach in the article attempts to expand the scope of urban politics research to bring divergent cases into conversation. We argue that loosely defined, similar and different causes and/or repeated outcomes of urban crises across diverse cases could form an appropriate base for research in urban politics. The article brings the politics of redistribution in three cases/countries under the spotlight, focusing on four dimensions of the politics of redistribution: (dis)possession; exploitation; commons; and representation. While the last two dimensions dominated the scene in Egypt, in the case of Türkiye, it was about the politics of representation and exploitation. In India, the politics of (dis)possession and commons seem to constitute the center of urban politics. Furthermore, as the comparative analysis of the countries reveals, the role of the state and its historical and spatial configurations have played a strategic role in the formation of the politics of distribution. The comparative analysis also indicates that the variegated neoliberal urban policies have become successful or have failed in containing urban crises. The reasons for the success/failure in urban policies depend on three major factors: (1) the spatio-institutional design of the urban policy-making mechanisms; (2) the historical pattern of urbanization; (3) the role of the nation-state, especially the central government, in the politics of redistribution.

Keywords: Comparative analysis, global south, Türkiye, urban crises, urban policies.

Corresponding Author: Mehmet Penpecioğlu, Türkiye
Manuscript Language: English
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