International Divided Cities Poli Sci 157

Urban conditions and the conflict. How is the broader conflict translated onto the urban landscape? Specific urban ethnic attributes of the city that are associated with intergroup conflict. These can include spatial/ territorial, political, social, economic, and cultural aspects of urban living. Specifically on Johannesburg.

Requirements: 1300

International Divided Cities

UPPP 178 / Poli Sci 157B / Sociol 176

Winter 2021    Remote Teaching   TuTh 3:30-4:50pm

LIVE: Zoom Meeting ID =959-7763-6803

RECORDINGS: Canvas folder Yuja

Professor Scott A. Bollens

Office hour: Wednesdays 12:00-1:00

Office hour zoom 416-062-9671

[email protected]

Teaching Assistant   

Sara O’Connor

Wednesdays 4:00-5:00

[email protected]

A note to my students: I will teach this course with an abundance of compassion for you and with a keen awareness of the difficult and challenging times facing you during the coronavirus pandemic. I will do everything possible to make this as much as possible, under the current circumstances, a high-quality learning environment. You will find me kindness and tolerance during this course. Let us do our best! Scott Bollens

Nicosia, Cyprus

This course explores urban divisions and conflicts in international cities where nationalistic ethnic differences are deep-seated and can facilitate violence. In these cities and societies, ethnic identity and nationalism combine to create pressures for group rights, autonomy, or even territorial separation.

Nationalist projects—often exclusionary and assertive—are projected onto urban spaces of multiple and often intertwining cultures. Polarized cities are where two or more ethnically-conscious groups—divided by religion, language, and/or culture, and perceived history—coexist in a situation where neither group is willing to concede supremacy to the other. In these cities, there is an absence of trust across the ethnic divide.

Whereas in most cities there is a belief maintained by different groups that the existing system of governance is capable of producing fair outcomes, assuming adequate political participation and representation of minority interests, governance amidst severe and unresolved multicultural differences in polarized cities is viewed by at least one identifiable group in the city as artificial, imposed, or illegitimate.

COURSE LEARNING OBJECTIVES

                Upon completion of this course:

  1. You will understand how nationalistic and ethnic conflict penetrates the urban setting and to be able explain differences between “polarized” and “divided” cities.
  2. You will comprehend how political polarization is manifested in the urban setting in the form of boundaries, demarcations, divisions, walls, security checkpoints, and contested governance.

 

  1. You will be able to identify how cities can either lessen or increase intergroup conflict. Most of the problems of the city are in the city, but not of the city; their roots, however defined, are in the larger society and not in the city per se. Yet, cities can have significant effects on how intergroup relations are manifest in a contemporary society.
  2. You will develop an awareness of how ethnic or nationalistic identity, urban space, housing, economic development, public education and land development intersect in polarized cities, both historically and today. You will be able to evaluate how the physical development of a city influences social and intergroup relations.

 

  1. You will be able to describe and critically analyze, for a specific polarized city, the options available to policy analysts and planners that may improve intergroup relations.
  2. You will be able to describe the lessons that polarized cities present to us regarding how to address divisions in non-polarized but divided settings of many cities throughout the world.

 

TEACHING METHOD

 

I will use Zoom to broadcast live lectures on TuTh 3:30-4:50. You can access Zoom on desktop or on mobile device. Once you are in Zoom, input the meeting ID during lecture times and you will be a participant in Zoom live lectures.

 

I will also upload recordings of all lectures onto Canvas. For those who cannot attend regular live lectures, you can view the lectures in their entirety at a time convenient to you. Lectures will be accessible in the Yuja 2.0 folder of your Canvas site. Lectures will be identified by the date of the live recording.

 

I will use varied formats during lectures. I will use PowerPoint slides, the white board, and short video presentations of many of the cities discussed in order to illuminate the difficult and challenging conditions of polarization present in these cities. I will introduce you to music from many regions of the world to provide a rich cultural context for the fascinating areas that we explore.

 

You can participate and ask questions through two main methods:

 

  1. Zoom live lectures— send a chat during lecture and my TA and I will do our best to respond.

 

  1. Canvas—write a comment/question in the discussion board section. TA and I will engage with

these discussions and respond to queries and comments.

 

 

 

READINGS

 

The primary reading for this course is the book:

 

Bollens, Scott. A. 2012. City and Soul in Divided Societies. London and New York: Routledge.

 

You will find the book, and all additional required readings, accessible through the class Canvas site. There is no need to purchase any book.

 

 

EVALUATION

 

 

Your grade will be determined as follows:

 

Paper 1                                                                  15%

Paper 2                                                                  15%

Paper 3                                                                  15 %

Midterm exam                                                                      25 %

Final exam                                                                             30 %

 

 

               

 

 

 

            Jerusalem, Israel/Palestine

 

 

 

 

Papers

 

Each paper is to be approximately 1150-1400 words in length and each paper will build upon your earlier papers.

 

Papers should be 1.5 line spaced, 12 font, with 1 inch margins.

                                Papers are to be turned into Canvas.

 

 

Paper I – Background to three cities. Discuss three polarized cities and,                                                                 for each, describe the main antagonists. Why conflict? Background to                                     urban setting (demographics, governance, other factors). 15%

DUE January 29, 10am

 

 

For the following papers, select one of the three cities you discussed in paper I and analyze that city for both papers II and III.

 

 

Paper II –Urban conditions and the conflict. How is the broader conflict translated                                             onto the urban landscape? Specific urban ethnic attributes of                                                  the city that are associated with inter-group conflict. These can include                                                spatial/ territorial, political, social, economic, and cultural aspects of                                       urban living. 15%

DUE February 19, 10am

 

 

Paper III – Policy options for urban peacebuilding. The problems and obstacles                                      urban conditions have presented to peacebuilding. What has been                                          government approach toward these urban attributes? What alternatives                                                  exist for bettering inter- group relations in the city? 15%

DUE March 12, 10am

               

                               

                               

Mid-term exam (Remote, online). It will be solely multiple-choice and true/false and will test your understanding of material. Timed exam, open notes. Exam window: February 11, 3:30pm-February 12, 3:30pm       

               

                Final exam (remote). It will be multiple-choice and true/false and will comprehensively test your knowledge of course material from all ten weeks. Timed exam, open notes. Exam window: March 16, 4pm – March 17, 4pm

 

                               

                                                           Sarajevo, Bosnia-Herzegovina (formerly Yugoslavia)

 

 

TIMELINE

January 29                   Week 4                                    Paper I

February 11-12           Week 6                                    Midterm exam

February 19                 Week 7                                    Paper II

March 12                    Week 10                                  Paper III

March 16 -17 Week 11                                  Final exam

 

 

HELPFUL SOURCES FOR YOUR PAPERS

 

Conflict in Cities and the Contested State                       http://www.conflictincities.org/

 

International Crisis Group               http://www.crisisgroup.org/

 

Urban Environment: Mirror and Mediator                     http://www.urbanpolarisation.org/

 

Citydivided.com  (Bollens research website)                  http://citydivided.com

 

United States Institute of Peace                                        http://www.usip.org

 

CIA World Factbook                            https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/

 

CLASS SCHEDULE AND READINGS

International Divided Cities

 

Readings listed for sessions are required and you should complete prior to the class meeting. I will test you on both reading and lecture material and these readings will provide you useful information for your three papers, so I recommend you stay up-to-date with readings. Readings outside of City and Soul  book are accessible through Canvas course site.

 

 

 

January 5 and 7

CITY DIVISIONS, CITY CONFLICT   

 

Reading

 

CITY AND SOUL. Chapter 1. Introduction

CITY AND SOUL. Chapter 2. Scholarship with an ‘I’

CITY AND SOUL. Pp 21-24. Nine Cities, Nine Sorrows.

 

Bollens, Scott A. 2006. “Urban Planning and Peace Building.” Progress in Planning. 66, 2: pages 67-76 only.

               

 

 

 

 

January 12 and 14

POLARIZED CITIES part I

 

 

Whereas most cities are divided socioeconomically and culturally, “polarized” cities contain a depth of antagonism and opposition beyond what the word “divided” connotes.

 

 

SHOWING OF THE DOCU-DRAMA MOVIE, WELCOME TO SARAJEVO (103 min)

 

 

Reading

 

CITY AND SOUL, Chapter 3. Soul in the City: Epic Cultures and Urban Fault‐lines

 

 

Gaffikin, Frank and Mike Morrissey. 2011. “The Divided City” Pp. 53-84 in Gaffikin, Frank   and Mike Morrissey (eds.) Planning in Divided Cities: Collaborative Shaping of Contested       Space. Chichester, West Sussex: Wiley-Blackwell.

 

 

               

 

 

 

 

 

 

January 19 and 21

POLARIZED CITIES part II

 

Polarized cities are commonly platforms for the playing out of broader epic struggles tied to religion, historic political claims, ideology, culture, and nationalism.

 

Reading

 

 

Gaffikin, Frank and Mike Morrissey. 2011. “Identity, Space, and Urban Planning.” Pp. 85-   105 in Gaffikin, Frank and Mike Morrissey (eds.) Planning in Divided Cities: Collaborative           Shaping of Contested Space. Chichester, West Sussex: Wiley-Blackwell.

 

 

Anderson, James. 2008. “From Empires to Ethno-National Conflicts: A Framework for         Studying ‘Divided Cities” in “Contested States—Part I”. Conflict in Cities and the         Contested State Research Program. Working paper #1.

 

 

January 26 and 28

SARAJEVO AND MOSTAR

 

Reading

CITY AND SOUL. Chapter 4. Sarajevo, Bosnia‐Herzegovina ‘Urbicide’ and Dayton

CITY AND SOUL. Chapter 9. Mostar, Bosnia‐Herzegovina: The City as War Spoils

 

 

Bollens, Scott A. 2006. “Urban Planning and Peace Building.” Progress in Planning. 66, 2: pages 88-91, 98-104, 111-117, 120-123.

 

 

 

 

February 2 and 4  

BELFAST AND JOHANNESBURG

 

Reading

 

CITY AND SOUL. Chapter 6. Belfast, Northern Ireland: A Peace’ Not Envisioned

CITY AND SOUL. Chapter 5. Johannesburg, South Africa: ‘Swimming Olympic Style after                                                      Years of Drowning’

 

Bollens, Scott A. 1998. “Ethnic Stability and Urban Reconstruction: Policy Dilemmas in Polarized Cities.” Comparative Political Studies 31, 6: 683-713. (Belfast and Johannesburg)

 

 

 

 

 

                                                                                                                 Belfast, Northern Ireland

 

February 9 and 16   (Midterm exam February 11-12)

JERUSALEM AND NICOSIA

 

Reading

CITY AND SOUL. Chapter 11. Jerusalem: Narrowing the Grounds for Peace

CITY AND SOUL. Chapter 7. Nicosia, Cyprus: Surmounting Walls, not Politics

 

Bollens, Scott A. 1998. “Urban Planning Amidst Ethnic Conflict: Jerusalem and Johannesburg.” Urban Studies 35, 4: 729-50.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

February 18 and 23   

BASQUE COUNTRY AND BARCELONA

 

Reading

CITY AND SOUL. Chapter 8. Basque Country, Spain: Moving From Etxea to Euskal Hiria

CITY AND SOUL. Chapter 10. Barcelona, Spain: An Inclusive Nationalism?

 

 

Bollens, Scott A. 2006. “Urban Planning and Peace Building.” Progress in Planning. 66, 2: pages 85-88, 92-98, 104-111, 121-123.

 

 

 

 

February 25 and March 2

BEIRUT

 

Reading

CITY AND SOUL. Chapter 12. Beirut, Lebanon: City in an Indeterminate State, Part I

CITY AND SOUL. Chapter 13. Beirut, Lebanon: City in an Indeterminate State, Part II

 

Beirut, Lebanon

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

March 4 and 9

COMPARING ACROSS CONFLICTS

 

Reading

CITY AND SOUL. Chapter 14. Comparing Across Conflicts

 

 

 

 

 

March 11

URBAN PEACE-BUILDING STRATEGIES AND POLICIES

 

Reading

CITY AND SOUL. Chapter 15. Cities and National Peace

 

 

                                                                               

 

 

                                                                Jerusalem, Israel / Palestine

 

                                                               

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