S
Seth Schindler
Researcher at University of Manchester
Publications - 55
Citations - 1406
Seth Schindler is an academic researcher from University of Manchester. The author has contributed to research in topics: Urbanization & Politics. The author has an hindex of 17, co-authored 44 publications receiving 910 citations. Previous affiliations of Seth Schindler include Humboldt University of Berlin & University of Sheffield.
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Journal ArticleDOI
COVID-19 and the case for global development
Johan A. Oldekop,Rory Horner,David Hulme,Roshan Adhikari,Bina Agarwal,Matthew Alford,Oliver Bakewell,Nicola Banks,Stephanie Barrientos,Tanja Bastia,Anthony Bebbington,Anthony Bebbington,Upasak Das,Ralitza Dimova,Richard Duncombe,Charis Enns,David Fielding,Christopher Foster,Timothy Foster,Tomas Frederiksen,Ping Gao,Tom Gillespie,Richard Heeks,Sam Hickey,Martin Hess,Nicholas Jepson,Ambarish Karamchedu,Uma Kothari,Aarti Krishnan,Tom Lavers,Aminu Mamman,Diana Mitlin,Negar Monazam Tabrizi,Tanja R. Müller,Khalid Nadvi,Giovanni Pasquali,Rose Pritchard,Kate Pruce,Chris Rees,Jaco Renken,Antonio Savoia,Seth Schindler,Annika Surmeier,Annika Surmeier,Gindo Tampubolon,Matthew Tyce,Vidhya Unnikrishnan,Yin-Fang Zhang +47 more
TL;DR: It is concluded that development studies must adapt to a very different context from when the field emerged in the mid-20th century, by examining the implications of the COVID-19 pandemic across four themes: global value chains, digitalisation, debt, and climate change.
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Towards a paradigm of Southern urbanism
Seth Schindler,Seth Schindler +1 more
TL;DR: The authors argue that cities in the global south constitute a distinctive "type" of human settlement and propose three tendencies that, when taken together, serve as the basis of an emergent paradigm of Southern urbanism.
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Getting the territory right: infrastructure-led development and the re-emergence of spatial planning strategies
Seth Schindler,J. Miguel Kanai +1 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors argue that infrastructure-led development constitutes an emergent international development regime whose imperative is to "get the territory right" (i.e., get the land right).
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Contesting Urban Metabolism: Struggles Over Waste‐to‐Energy in Delhi, India
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors argue that through the conceptualization of urban metabolisms advanced by ecological economists and industrial ecologists, materialist and critical perspectives can be mutually enriching, and argue that the materiality and political economy of cities are co-constituted.
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Peri-urban Promises of Connectivity: Linking project-led polycentrism to the infrastructure scramble
J. Miguel Kanai,Seth Schindler +1 more
TL;DR: In this article, an interpretive framework linking polycentric urban expansion in emerging/frontier economies to the global extension of infrastructure networks is proposed, drawing from scholarship on state-of-the-art infrastructure networks.