The Non-Post-Socialist City

Urban Policymaking in Central and Eastern Europe

The Non-Post-Socialist City examines contemporary urban policies through case studies of six cities in four states across the CEE/FSU region.

This book adopts a rarely used approach in the study of so-called post-socialist cities-combining several years of in-depth empirical research with a broad comparative frame. Building on this foundation, it analyzes urban policymaking processes in Leipzig (Germany); Warsaw and Krakow (Poland); Tallinn (Estonia); and Kyiv and Lviv (Ukraine). The monograph interprets these dynamics through the author's concept of diluted post-socialism, which highlights not only trajectories rooted in the Soviet-dominated era but also a range of pre- or non-socialist legacies that interact with-and often complicate-the few decades of now-defunct state-socialist rule. Particular attention is given to four policy fields: mobility, green infrastructure, housing, and spatial planning. While these domains pose broadly similar dimensions across the six cities, their organization reveals a highly diverse urban landscape that is too often flattened under the "post-socialist" label.

The book is intended for scholars, analysts, students, and anyone interested in urbanization processes in the former Eastern Bloc, as well as in the impact of the global populist turn on urban policymaking within this region and in a broader urban context.

November 2025, ca. 180 Seiten, Routledge Contemporary Perspectives on Urban Growth, Innovation and Change, Englisch
Taylor and Francis
978-1-041-12258-6

Weitere Titel der Reihe: Routledge Contemporary Perspectives on Urban Growth, Innovation and Change

Alle anzeigen

Weitere Titel zum Thema