Power, Legibility, and Justice: The Politics of Urban Life

In the shaping of urban systems, the state’s gaze has been central to how power is exercised. James C. Scott’s Seeing Like a State unpacks how legibility – the rendering of society and nature into simplified, administrative forms – has historically enabled states to pursue large-scale interventions with uneven consequences. Scott highlights four critical elements of what he terms negative social engineering…

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How We Use Theory (And the Things We Don’t Say Out Loud)

What does it really mean when someone says a project is “theoretical”? As I advance in my knowledge of research, I often hear scholars say “make a theoretical contribution” in discussions, and rarely unpack what they mean. I recently read Abend’s The Meaning of Theory, and I found his breakdown of seven different meanings helpful, especially when thinking through how we use (and sometimes misuse) theory in our fields.

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