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Contesting racialization in a neoliberal city: cross-cultural collective formation as a strategy among alternative social planning organizations in Toronto

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Abstract

Many cities in the twenty-first century are increasingly culturally diverse and neoliberal due to processes of political, economic, and cultural globalization. While the need to examine the disjuncture between neoliberal ideology and practice remains paramount (Brenner and Theodore in Antipode 34(3):349–379, 2002), the implications of neoliberal policy on the actual experiences and activities of diverse groups in the city require further study (Hackworth in The neoliberal city: governance, ideology, and development in American urbanism, Cornell University Press, Ithaca, 2007). This article contributes to urban studies engaging discourses about the practical rather than purely ideological aspects of neoliberalism, and discourses about the experiences of racialization in North American cities. Through a case study of social planning practices in contemporary Toronto, the author shows how neoliberal policies have shaped social planning in Toronto since 1998, and how several cross-cultural organizations representing Chinese, continental-African, Latino-Hispanic and South Asian communities were compelled to develop a collective to jointly contest the racialization of their communities. The cross-cultural collective’s work forces a reconsideration of what constitutes mainstream Toronto and offers an alternative approach to the dominant social planning in the city; however, it is not sufficient to replace the pervasive neoliberal hegemony as long as it remains caught up within its structures.

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Notes

  1. This does not include the Serbian-Kosovo refugees.

  2. ACSDC formed as an organization in 2002.

  3. I was a member of the Board of Directors of CASSA from 1999 to 2003.

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Acknowledgments

An earlier version of this paper was presented in a session on Racialized Spaces, Racialized Bodies at the 2007 Association of American Geographers (AAG) Conference in San Francisco. Special thanks to the Dr. Robert Yarbrough, Dr. Joshua Inwood, and two anonymous reviewers for their valuable comments. Thanks also to Dr. Megan R. C. Salhus and Dr. Liette Gilbert for their editorial remarks. The Ontario Graduate Scholarship Program and the CERIS Graduate Student Award provided funds for the research fieldwork informing this paper. I am indebted to the leaders and community members of the Alternative Planning Group, some of whom are mentioned in the interviews cited in this article, for their participation in this research. The individuals who were interviewed for this research, and whose testimonies are included in this article, gave the author permission to use their real names.

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Correspondence to Leela Viswanathan.

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Viswanathan, L. Contesting racialization in a neoliberal city: cross-cultural collective formation as a strategy among alternative social planning organizations in Toronto. GeoJournal 75, 261–272 (2010). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10708-009-9305-6

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