“The Glorified Municipality”: State formation and the urban process in North America |
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Authors: | Katherine M Johnson |
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Institution: | aUniversity of Northern Colorado, Geography, 2241 Candelaria Hall, Greeley, CO 80639-0062, USA |
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Abstract: | This article revisits the debate over whether and to what extent the cities of the United States and Canada can be understood as a common ‘North American city’ by reconsidering the role of the their common federal system of government. Drawing on a Marxist theory of the capitalist state and the municipal histories of New York State and the Province of Ontario, the article traces the institutions and patterns of urbanization in the two countries to a dialectic of political conflict between the sub-national states and the industrializing cities, conditioned by federal divisions of sovereignty and grounded in the expanding social property relations of capital. The final section connects this dialectic to historically new conditions for the expanded reproduction of capital, specifically in the constitution of land as a commodity form. It also speculates briefly on the implications of this analysis for a more spatially informed theory of the capitalist state. |
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Keywords: | State theory Historical materialism Land-use Urbanization Federalism North American city |
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