Social infrastructure and left behind places
Author(s)
Tomaney, John
Blackman, Maeve
Natarajan, Lucy
Panayotopoulos Tsiros, Dimitrios
Sutcliffe-Braithwaite, Florence
Taylor, Myfanwy
Language
EnglishAbstract
This book explores the making, unmaking and remaking of social infrastructure in ‘left-behind places’. Such places, typically once flourishing industrial communities that have been excluded from recent economic growth, now attract academic and policy attention as sites of a political backlash against globalisation and liberal democracy. The book focuses on the role of social infrastructure as a key component of this story.
Seeking to move beyond a narrowly economistic of reading ‘left behind places’, the book addresses the understudied affective dimensions of ‘left-behindness’. It develops an analytical framework that emphasises the importance of place attachments and the consequences of their disruption; considers ‘left behind places’ as ‘moral communities’ and the making of social infrastructure as an expression of this; views the unmaking of social infrastructure through the lens of ‘root shock’; and explains efforts at remaking it in terms of the articulation of ‘radical hope’.
The analysis builds upon a case study of a former mining community in County Durham, North East England. Using mixed methods, it offers a ‘deep place study’ of a single village to understand more fully the making, unmaking and remaking of social infrastructure. It shows how a place once richly endowed with social infrastructure, saw this endowment wither and the effects this had on the community. However, it also records efforts of the local people to rebuild social infrastructure, typically drawing the lessons of the past. Although the story of one village, the methods, results and policy recommendation have much wider applicability.
The book will be of interest to researchers, policy makers and others concerned with the fate of ‘left behind places’.
Keywords
Left Behind Places;Industry 4.0;Lagging Regions;Social Infrastructure;Social Capital;Regional developmentDOI
10.4324/9781032710051ISBN
9781032710051, 9781040029039, 9781032710044, 9781040029008Publisher
Taylor & FrancisPublisher website
https://taylorandfrancis.com/Publication date and place
2024Grantor
Imprint
RoutledgeSeries
Regional Studies Policy Impact Books,Classification
The environment
Regional and area planning
Development studies
Human geography
Economics of industrial organization