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Neil Brenner

American urban theorist From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Neil Brenner
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Neil Brenner (born 1969) is an American urban theorist currently serving as Lucy Flower Professor of Urban Sociology at the University of Chicago.[1] He previously was professor of urban theory at the Harvard Graduate School of Design and professor of sociology at New York University. He has also held visiting appointments at the National University of Singapore, University of Amsterdam, Bard College, Maynooth University, University of Bristol, and University of Urbino.[2] He is a member of the American Sociological Association[3] and the Association of American Geographers.

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He serves on the advisory and editorial board of 14 academic journals and has edited or authored more than 10 award-winning books. Brenner's works have been translated into Chinese, Croatian, Finnish, French, Hungarian, German, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Persian, Polish, Portuguese, Spanish, and Turkish.[4]

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Affiliated institutions

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Awards

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Selected Journal Articles

Bibliography

Authored books in English

  • New State Spaces: Urban Governance and the Rescaling of Statehood (2004)[9]
  • Critique of Urbanization: Selected Essays (2016)[10]
  • New Urban Spaces: Urban Theory and the Scale Question (2019)[11]

Authored books in other languages

  • La explosion de lo urbano [12]
  • Stato, spazio, urbanizzazione (2017)[13]
  • Teoría urbana crítica y políticas de escala (2017)[14]
  • Espaços da Urbanização: o urbano a partir da teoria crítica (2018)[15]
  • 城市,地域,星球:批判城市理论 / City, Territory, Planet: Studies in Critical Urban Theory (2020)[16]

Edited and co-edited books

  • Implosions/Explosions: Towards a Study of Planetary Urbanization (2014)
  • Cities for People, not for Profit: Critical Urban Theory and the Right to the City (2011)
  • Henri Lefebvre, State, Space, World (2009)
  • The Global Cities Reader (2006)
  • State/Space: A Reader (2003)
  • Spaces of Neoliberalism: Urban Restructuring in Western Europe and North America (2002)

Pamphlets

  • "The Afterlives of Neoliberalism" (2012)[17]
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References

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