The Proposal Economy

Neoliberal Citizenship in “Ontario’s Most Historic Town”

By Pamela Stern & Peter Hall
Categories: Urban Studies, Planning & Architecture, Planning (urban & Regional), Regional & Cultural Studies, Political Science, Canadian Political Science, Social Sciences, Anthropology
Publisher: UBC Press
Hardcover : 9780774828215, 264 pages, January 2015
Paperback : 9780774828222, 264 pages, July 2015
Ebook (PDF) : 9780774828239, 264 pages, January 2015
Ebook (EPUB) : 9780774828246, 264 pages, January 2015
Ebook (MobiPocket) : 9780774845632, 264 pages, December 2016

Table of contents

Introduction

 

1 Ontario’s Most Historic Town

 

2 Placing Cobalt

 

3 Citizenship and Local Government

 

4 Reluctant Regionalists

 

5 The Proposal Economy

 

Postscript

 

Appendices

 

Notes

 

Bibliography

 

Index

Provides new perspectives on the ways that citizenship is produced and reproduced under conditions of neoliberalism.

Description

In 2001 the northern Ontario town of Cobalt won a competition to be named the province’s “Most Historic Town.” This honour came as Cobalters were also applying for and winning federal and provincial development grants to remake this once important silver mining centre. This book, based on extended ethnographic and multi-method research, examines the multiple ways that development proposal writing is intertwined with neoliberal citizenship. The authors argue that the citizens of Cobalt have become entrenched in a “proposal economy,” a system that empowers them to imagine, engage, and propose but not to count on the state to provide certain services.