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oapen-20.500.12657-571352022-06-29T02:57:06Z Chapter 13 The multi-scalar nature of policy im/mobilities van Eck, Emil van Melik, Rianne Schapendonk, Joris Geography, Social Sciences, Urban Studies, marketplaces, representational theory, urban mobility, everyday geographies bic Book Industry Communication::R Earth sciences, geography, environment, planning::RG Geography bic Book Industry Communication::R Earth sciences, geography, environment, planning::RG Geography::RGC Human geography The widely articulated death of public space in the early 1990s marked the beginning of an extensive interdisciplinary debate on public spaces in general and marketplaces in particular, discussing their social characteristics, political conduct and trends towards privatisation. While these studies describe the context of diversity and mobility as inherently translocal, they, somewhat paradoxically, tend to approach the reigning ‘relations of ruling’ in public spaces as merely local and equate them with municipal agendas of retail reinvestments and commercial gentrification strategies. Yet, as marketplaces come into daily existence through the everyday socio-economic practices of ambulant traders who connect a plurality of places, so are these translocal activities influenced by a multi-scalar web of rules and regulations that go beyond the territorial boundaries of marketplaces. The aim of this chapter is to empirically investigate the linkages among marketplaces, organisations and translocal processes of administration and governance by looking at the effects of the 2006 EU-law “Services in the Internal Market Directive” (2006/123/EC) on the place-making capacities and mobility patterns of traders in the Netherlands. It shows that locally instantiated regulations that affect marketplaces are embedded in multi-faceted institutional webs consisting of supranational, national and local policy levels in which actors compete and collaborate over the production of public space. 2022-06-28T12:39:14Z 2022-06-28T12:39:14Z 2023 chapter 9781032053257 9781032053264 https://library.oapen.org/handle/20.500.12657/57135 eng application/pdf Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International 9781003197058_10.4324_9781003197058-13.pdf Taylor & Francis Marketplaces Routledge 10.4324/9781003197058-13 10.4324/9781003197058-13 7b3c7b10-5b1e-40b3-860e-c6dd5197f0bb f3aab22b-6bb6-4dbc-9653-ba05ec3126f3 f8086bb3-4491-4846-8538-b72c95d76c0d 9781032053257 9781032053264 Routledge 12 Radboud Universiteit Radboud University open access
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The widely articulated death of public space in the early 1990s marked the beginning of an extensive interdisciplinary debate on public spaces in general and marketplaces in particular, discussing their social characteristics, political conduct and trends towards privatisation. While these studies describe the context of diversity and mobility as inherently translocal, they, somewhat paradoxically, tend to approach the reigning ‘relations of ruling’ in public spaces as merely local and equate them with municipal agendas of retail reinvestments and commercial gentrification strategies. Yet, as marketplaces come into daily existence through the everyday socio-economic practices of ambulant traders who connect a plurality of places, so are these translocal activities influenced by a multi-scalar web of rules and regulations that go beyond the territorial boundaries of marketplaces. The aim of this chapter is to empirically investigate the linkages among marketplaces, organisations and translocal processes of administration and governance by looking at the effects of the 2006 EU-law “Services in the Internal Market Directive” (2006/123/EC) on the place-making capacities and mobility patterns of traders in the Netherlands. It shows that locally instantiated regulations that affect marketplaces are embedded in multi-faceted institutional webs consisting of supranational, national and local policy levels in which actors compete and collaborate over the production of public space.
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9781003197058_10.4324_9781003197058-13.pdf
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9781003197058_10.4324_9781003197058-13.pdf
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9781003197058_10.4324_9781003197058-13.pdf
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9781003197058_10.4324_9781003197058-13.pdf
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Taylor & Francis
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2022
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1771297387624529920
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