![]() Urban Studies Unbound: Postmillennial spaces of theory. Lawrence, Kansas: University of Kansas Press. Series B, Human Geography, 71 (1) 3-17 and Clarence Stone (1989) Regime Politics. Review symposium on: David Harvey (1989) from managerialism to entrepreneurialism: the treansformation in urban governance in lage capitalism, Geografiska Annaler. Towards new meeting places – engagements, reconstructions, reorientations. ![]() World class aspirations, urban informality, and poverty politics: A North-South comparison. Forthcoming in Annals of the Association of American Geographers. ![]() Wheeling out urban resilience: Philantrocapitalism, marketization and local practice. Lancione (eds) The Handbook on Global Urbanism: Essays on the City and its Future. Global urbanism inside/out: Thinking through Jakarta. Forthcoming in International Journal of Urban and Regional Research. Space grabs: Colonizing the vertical city. Tjung Ju L., Leitner, H., Sheppard, E., Herlambang, S., and Astuti, W. Journal of Political Ecology 27, 1, 1-22. For food space: Theorizing alternative food networks beyond alterity. “Gastarbeiter in der städtischen Gesellschaft – Zum Problem der Segregation, Integration und Assimilationvon Arbeitsmigranten am Beispiel der jugoslawischen Gastarbeiter in Wien”. Measuring the ‘Unmeasurable’: The Analysis of Q ua lit at i v e Spatial Data. “ Contesting Neoliberalism : Urban Frontiers”. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press. Everyday Equalities: Making Multicultures in Settler Colonial Cities. įincher, R., Iveson, K., Leitner, H., Preston, V. Urban Studies Inside/Out: Theory, Method, Practice. All asynchronous classes holding asynchronous online exams should ensure the due date for their exam is no later than Wednesday, May 10.ġ0:30 a.m.All asynchronous classes holding synchronous online exams should take their final exam on Thursday, May 4.Study days: Tuesday, May 2, Wednesday, May 3, and Sunday, May 7 to 12:30 p.m., Thursday, December 22ġ:30 to 3:30 p.m., Wednesday, December 21įinals exams: Thursday, May 4 through Saturday, May 6, and Monday, May 8 through Wednesday, May 10 All asynchronous classes holding asynchronous online exams should ensure the due date for their exam is no later than Thursday, December 22.ġ0:30 a.m.All asynchronous classes holding synchronous online exams should take their final exam on Friday, December 16.All synchronous classes holding asynchronous online exams should ensure the due date for their exam is not earlier than the published Standard Final Exam Schedule day/time.All synchronous classes holding synchronous online exams will follow the published Standard Final Exam Schedule.Guidelines for all online final exams are as follows: Always verify your final exam time with your course instructor. In rare circumstances, a final exam time will change because of an instructor’s request.If your course is listed as a common exam, that takes precedence and is the official final exam time for your course.If your course meets at different times on different days, use the time from the earliest day of the week that your course meets to find your exam time.If your course meets for more than three days per week or on an unusual schedule that isn’t either MWF or TTh, use the MWF exam time that matches your course’s scheduled time.The final exam time for that course will be listed in the next column. Using the chart below, find the scheduled time and days for your lecture, seminar, or colloquium. University policy states that no final exams may be scheduled on study days. Study days: Thursday, December 15, and Sunday, December 18 Final exams: Friday, December 16 through Saturday, December 17, and Monday, December 19 through Thursday, December 22
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