Low-Budget Urbanity. Frugal Practices Transforming the City

Low-Budget Urbanity. Frugal Practices Transforming the City invites PhD and post-doctoral researchers to their first Early Career Laboratory

from March 25th to 28th 2013 at HafenCity University in Hamburg.

lease note that travel costs are refunded and accommodation will be provided for this workshop. We encourage you to send this call to your relevant networks.



Call for Papers:

Whatʼs the value of saving costs?

The Urban Economics and Politics of Everyday Saving Practices

Low-Budget Urbanity is a research programme that explores contemporary urban

phenomena such as ridesharing and online hospitality networks, water-saving

infrastructures and DIY-practices of house owners, and second-hand consumer

cooperatives as saving practices that transform the urban setting. These self-organizedsaving practices all involve “complex encounters, connections and mixtures of diverse hybrid networks of humans and animals, objects and information, commodities and waste“ (Sheller and Urry 2006:2). Here cultures of frugality and sharing (Botsman/Rogers 2010) emerge as well as cheap mass production and consumption practices, creating new economic forms that have long-term effects on the urban space. This research lab is interested in those “low budget practices” which are not just an expression of a lack of material means and imposed abstinence (Oswalt 2005, Bude/Medicus/Willisch 2011). Rather we also seek to explore low budget practices that are manifestations of conscious decisions to save money (and resources) by diverse practices of sharing and self-help. In this 4-day laboratory, we try to focus on the new practices that help trace the historical trajectories of low-budget urban life, the way people perform a budget and the materialities that surround this performance, the networks and communities that create an alternative urbanity, as well as the politics of saving money.



The Early Career Laboratory provides a stimulating mix of lectures by senior scholars,

presentations by fellow-PhDʼs, a publishing workshop with journal editors, and

networking opportunities across adjacent academic fields. It will be located at one of

IBA's (Internationale Bauaustellung Hamburg) hotspots in Hamburg-Wilhelmsburg at

Universität der Nachbarschaften (UdN), which starts the weekend before.



The Lab seeks to investigate how everyday saving practices are studied and researched today. While engaging in fields of self-entrepreneurialism, illegal practices or social stigmata, researchers are confronted with economical and political modes within their fields. How to frame these economical or political models of thinking? What is the value of saving costs in the field? What is considered as costly?



Submissions should refer to one or more of the following issues:

1. Performative Budgets: practices of saving and logics of calculating

2. Organising materialities along their various costs

3. New practices, new forms? Tracing historical trajectories of low-budget

urbanities (distributed agency, self-organisation, entrepreneurialism)

4. Networks and communities: alternative urbanities?

5. The politics of saving money



Please send your abstract of 400 words max with a short cv until January 21th 2013 to

heike.derwanz(at)hcu-hamburg.de