Pathways of entrepreneurial urban governance Spatial dynamics and community politics in Istanbul's regeneration

Open Access
Authors
Supervisors
Cosupervisors
  • G. Erkut
Award date 15-05-2025
ISBN
  • 9789493431461
Number of pages 216
Organisations
  • Faculty of Social and Behavioural Sciences (FMG) - Amsterdam Institute for Social Science Research (AISSR)
Abstract
What happens when urban governance adopts state-driven entrepreneurialism? Istanbul—a city metamorphosed into a canvas with its towering megaprojects—tells a profound tale of power, policy failures, and post-populist adaptations. Through the lens of Istanbul's transformation, the dissertation focuses on socio-spatial dynamics and community politics of entrepreneurial urban governance. While this governance model promises economic growth and innovation, this study reveals a fundamental tension: even as it generates new forms of social capital and community engagement, it simultaneously intensifies socio-spatial inequalities and marginalizes resistance and contestation, especially through state-led interventions.
Highlighting Istanbul’s large-scale regeneration as a case to understand the broader phenomena of non-Western entrepreneurial governance, this dissertation contributes more diverse perspectives to urban governance scholarship. The outcomes demonstrate how state-driven entrepreneurial strategies are not fixed in one mode but fluctuate depending on scenarios shaped by resistance, negotiations, or multi-level interactions among urban actors. These governance mechanisms move back and forth between contrasting approaches—from top-down planning to self-organization and to post-populist politics.
This dissertation argues that authoritarian entrepreneurial governance paradoxically creates conditions for local innovation and resistance. Local actors leverage state-designed tools and frameworks to challenge the system itself, either by re-politicizing depoliticized governance frameworks or by shaping community politics through market-driven imperatives. Urban residents display varieties of ‘entrepreneurial citizenship’, institutionalizing self-organization or adopting post-populist responses that imitate entrepreneurial practices of the state and property developers. This demonstrates how entrepreneurial governance, even in authoritarian contexts, can emerge as a platform for negotiated urban governance.
Document type PhD thesis
Language English
Related publication Reading the shift from planning to spatial governance in an entrepreneurial context
Downloads
Thesis (complete) (Embargo up to 2027-05-15)
Chapter 2: What the future has in store: A critical trend-reading of entrepreneurial urban governance and key determinants (Embargo up to 2027-05-15)
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