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In the postindustrial city, leisure, the representation of place, and the experience of the city may be counted among its leading exports. As the product is, in a real sense, the city itself, urban space is constantly being reworked by urban boosters to capture an increasing share of the world tourism market, renewing the product through investments in cultural, leisure and mobility infrastructure, aggressive place promotion, and careful brand management (Fainstein and Judd 1999; Gotham 2007; Greenberg 2008). The commercial real estate industry has for decades aggressively promoted urban tourism as an economic growth strategy, justifying public supports for hotel
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In April 2013, the New York City Department of City Planning initiated a public review process to rezone a seventy-three-block area of Midtown Manhattan around Grand Central Station, known in planning documents and real estate parlance as East Midtown. The proposal sought to lift existing restrictions on building density in order to spur development of new commercial office space along the iconic avenues of corporate America, thus ?ensur[ing] the area?s future as a world-class business district and major job generator for New York City? (Department of City Planning 2013a). The city argued that this new development was crucial to ensure
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This chapter discusses the concept of formal legal rationality by bringing together the conceptions of Max Weber and of Hans Kelsen. The relationship between the thought of Kelsen and that of Weber is certainly complex, but altogether fascinating and rich in lessons for the sociology of law. In large part, Weber focuses his interest in the Sociology of Law on the processes of rationalization which foster the logical coherence and systematization of law. One of the most controversial aspects of the legal and political sociology of Weber rests on the relationship established between the formal rationality of law and the type of legitimacy characteristic of modernity, the belief in the legality of domination. The fundamental divergence between Weber and Kelsen strongly influences the incompatibility of the Kelsenian postulate of the identity of law and State which we have evoked, and the Weberian distinction between State and non-State law.
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- La Chaire BMO - Diversité et gouvernance (17)
- Le Centre de recherche interuniversitaire sur la mondialisation et le travail (CRIMT) (125)
- MYRIAGONE Chaire McConnell – Université de Montréal en mobilisation des connaissances jeunesse (6)
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