Dr. rer. pol. Henrik Lebuhn
Profil
Forschungsthemen3
Sozialer Wohnraumversorgungsbedarf. Wohnverhältnisse, Versorgungsbedarf und die Instrumente der Wohnungspolitik des Bundes und der Länder
Quelle ↗Förderer: Hans-Böckler-Stiftung Zeitraum: 11/2016 - 12/2017 Projektleitung: Dr. rer. pol. Henrik Lebuhn, Dr. phil. Andrej Holm
Urban Citizenship-Making at Times of Crisis: Building Local-Level Resilience Among Migrants in Berlin, Copenhagen and Tel-Aviv
Quelle ↗Förderer: Volkswagen Stiftung Zeitraum: 04/2021 - 09/2022 Projektleitung: Dr. rer. pol. Henrik Lebuhn, Dr. Nir Cohen, Dr. Tatiana Fogelman
Urban citizenship revisited (Veranstaltung: 15.-16.09.2011, Berlin und Tel Aviv)
Quelle ↗Förderer: DFG sonstige Programme Zeitraum: 06/2011 - 12/2011 Projektleitung: Dr. rer. pol. Henrik Lebuhn
Mögliche Industrie-Partner10
Stand: 26.4.2026, 19:48:44 (Top-K=20, Min-Cosine=0.4)
- 39 Treffer59.6%
- Integrated Urban Food Policies – Developing Sustainability Co-Benefits, Spatial Linkages, Social Inclusion and Sectoral Connections To Transform Food Systems in City-Regions (FoodCLIC)P59.6%
- „BiodivERsA-Verbundvorhaben: Grün-Blaue Infrastruktur für lokale Lösungen in komplexen sozioökologischen Systemen (ENABLE), Teilvorhaben: Fallstudienkontext und Co-design Workshops zur Identifizierung lokaler Policy- Lösungsansätze.“P51.4%
- Integrated Urban Food Policies – Developing Sustainability Co-Benefits, Spatial Linkages, Social Inclusion and Sectoral Connections To Transform Food Systems in City-Regions (FoodCLIC)
- 28 Treffer59.6%
- Integrated Urban Food Policies – Developing Sustainability Co-Benefits, Spatial Linkages, Social Inclusion and Sectoral Connections To Transform Food Systems in City-Regions (FoodCLIC)P59.6%
- Integrated Urban Food Policies – Developing Sustainability Co-Benefits, Spatial Linkages, Social Inclusion and Sectoral Connections To Transform Food Systems in City-Regions (FoodCLIC)
- 28 Treffer59.6%
- Integrated Urban Food Policies – Developing Sustainability Co-Benefits, Spatial Linkages, Social Inclusion and Sectoral Connections To Transform Food Systems in City-Regions (FoodCLIC)P59.6%
- Integrated Urban Food Policies – Developing Sustainability Co-Benefits, Spatial Linkages, Social Inclusion and Sectoral Connections To Transform Food Systems in City-Regions (FoodCLIC)
- 28 Treffer59.6%
- Integrated Urban Food Policies – Developing Sustainability Co-Benefits, Spatial Linkages, Social Inclusion and Sectoral Connections To Transform Food Systems in City-Regions (FoodCLIC)P59.6%
- Integrated Urban Food Policies – Developing Sustainability Co-Benefits, Spatial Linkages, Social Inclusion and Sectoral Connections To Transform Food Systems in City-Regions (FoodCLIC)
- 28 Treffer59.6%
- Integrated Urban Food Policies – Developing Sustainability Co-Benefits, Spatial Linkages, Social Inclusion and Sectoral Connections To Transform Food Systems in City-Regions (FoodCLIC)P59.6%
- Integrated Urban Food Policies – Developing Sustainability Co-Benefits, Spatial Linkages, Social Inclusion and Sectoral Connections To Transform Food Systems in City-Regions (FoodCLIC)
- 27 Treffer59.6%
- Integrated Urban Food Policies – Developing Sustainability Co-Benefits, Spatial Linkages, Social Inclusion and Sectoral Connections To Transform Food Systems in City-Regions (FoodCLIC)P59.6%
- Integrated Urban Food Policies – Developing Sustainability Co-Benefits, Spatial Linkages, Social Inclusion and Sectoral Connections To Transform Food Systems in City-Regions (FoodCLIC)
- 33 Treffer59.6%
- Integrated Urban Food Policies – Developing Sustainability Co-Benefits, Spatial Linkages, Social Inclusion and Sectoral Connections To Transform Food Systems in City-Regions (FoodCLIC)P59.6%
- Welfare, Wealth and Work for Europe (EU Research Program FP7-SSH-2011)T50.2%
- Green Infrastructure and Urban Biodiversity for Sustainable Urban Development and the Green EconomySurgeP46.9%
- Integrated Urban Food Policies – Developing Sustainability Co-Benefits, Spatial Linkages, Social Inclusion and Sectoral Connections To Transform Food Systems in City-Regions (FoodCLIC)
- 27 Treffer59.6%
- Integrated Urban Food Policies – Developing Sustainability Co-Benefits, Spatial Linkages, Social Inclusion and Sectoral Connections To Transform Food Systems in City-Regions (FoodCLIC)P59.6%
- Integrated Urban Food Policies – Developing Sustainability Co-Benefits, Spatial Linkages, Social Inclusion and Sectoral Connections To Transform Food Systems in City-Regions (FoodCLIC)
Ernährungsrat Budapest BUDAPEST FOVAROS ONKORMANYZATA
PT27 Treffer59.6%- Integrated Urban Food Policies – Developing Sustainability Co-Benefits, Spatial Linkages, Social Inclusion and Sectoral Connections To Transform Food Systems in City-Regions (FoodCLIC)P59.6%
- Integrated Urban Food Policies – Developing Sustainability Co-Benefits, Spatial Linkages, Social Inclusion and Sectoral Connections To Transform Food Systems in City-Regions (FoodCLIC)
- 27 Treffer59.6%
- Integrated Urban Food Policies – Developing Sustainability Co-Benefits, Spatial Linkages, Social Inclusion and Sectoral Connections To Transform Food Systems in City-Regions (FoodCLIC)P59.6%
- Integrated Urban Food Policies – Developing Sustainability Co-Benefits, Spatial Linkages, Social Inclusion and Sectoral Connections To Transform Food Systems in City-Regions (FoodCLIC)
Publikationen25
Top 25 nach Zitationen — Quelle: OpenAlex (BAAI/bge-m3 embedded für Matching).
City · 102 Zitationen · DOI
Since the first signing of the Schengen Agreement in 1985, Europe's borders have been changing profoundly. New actors, rules and institutions have emerged and transformed the character of the European border regime. This paper argues that cities play a crucial role in this process. They have become an important arena, where the re-categorization and re-scaling of spaces and borders, and the expansion and diversification of the modes of control and enforcement within Europe take place. These dynamics are contradictory, however, as examples from Germany and Italy show: on the one hand, local state agencies, as well as private and semi-private institutions on the local scale increasingly participate in the monitoring and in the enforcement of migrants' legal statuses. On the other hand, local actors and institutions are also carving out place-specific spaces of rights and recognition for migrants. This dual process turns the urban realm into a conflictive site of negotiating, shaping and interconnecting local practices of border control and urban citizenship, and in effect renders European cities an uneven landscape of urban borderspaces.
41 Zitationen · DOI
Care and the City is a cross-disciplinary collection of chapters examining urban social spaces, in which caring and uncaring practices intersect and shape people’s everyday lives. While asking how care and uncare are embedded in the urban condition, the book focuses on inequalities in caring relations and the ways they are acknowledged, reproduced, and overcome in various spaces, discourses, and practices. This book provides a pathway for urban scholars to start engaging with approaches to conceptualize care in the city through a critical-reflexive analysis of processes of urbanization. It pursues a systematic integration of empirical, methodological, theoretical, and ethical approaches to care in urban studies, while overcoming a crisis-centered reading of care and the related ambivalences in care debates, practices, and spaces. These strands are elaborated via a conceptual framework of care and situated within broader theoretical debates on cities, urbanization, and urban development with detailed case studies from Europe, the Americas, and Asia. By establishing links to various fields of knowledge, this book seeks to systematically introduce debates on care to the interconnecting fields of urban studies, planning theory, and related disciplines for the first time.
sub\urban zeitschrift für kritische stadtforschung · 39 Zitationen · DOI
Der Artikel stellt die vor allem in der angloamerikanischen Literatur virulente Urban-Citizenship-Debatte ausführlich vor und diskutiert deren Potenziale für die kritische Stadt- und Migrationsforschung. Der Ansatz wird als besonders innovativ eingeschätzt, da er einerseits die Perspektive des städtischen Regierens der Migration aufwirft und dabei gleichzeitig in der Lage ist, migrantische Akteure und migrantische agency jenseits ethnisierender und kulturalistischer Paradigmen zu thematisieren. Im Kontext neoliberaler Subjektivierungspolitiken in der Stadt setzt sich der Artikel darüber hinaus mit der Prozess- und Konflikthaftigkeit von Citizenship-Dynamiken auseinander sowie mit zunehmenden Fragmentierungsprozessen, die zu neuen städtischen Akteurskonstellationen führen.
24 Zitationen · DOI
International Journal of Urban and Regional Research · 24 Zitationen · DOI
Abstract Based on a comparison of Berlin and Tel Aviv, this article investigates the ways in which ensembles of participatory instruments mediate between neoliberal urban regimes and political agency shaping differentially the meaning of participation and the types of claims that can be advanced. The article gives an overview of the recent history of both cities through the lens of participatory politics. Two in‐depth case studies further examine the relationship between participatory politics and claim making in each setting: the recent conflict over a social center in the district of Friedrichshain‐Kreuzberg in Berlin and the Levinsky tent city of 2011 in Tel Aviv. In the concluding section, the article suggests that, rather than assuming that participatory tools either co‐opt movements or can be appropriated by them, we need to rethink the relationship between participatory tools, rights and recognition, and ask how participatory structures and political agency constitute each other in interwoven dynamics.
Monthly Review · 20 Zitationen · DOI
All along the European border, the year 2006 set new records: Spanish authorities reported 6,000 refugees dead, drowned in the Atlantic Ocean while trying to reach the Canary Islands, off West Africa.1 Hundreds more suffocated in containers, trucks, and cargo boats in the ports of London, Dublin, and Rotterdam, or froze to death in Eastern Europe. Others, locked up in one of the innumerable internment camps spread all over the heart of Europe and North Africa, desperately decided to end their own lives.2 At the same time, Europe reported the lowest rate in years of refugees officially seeking asylum. This list obviously doesn't point to a more peaceful world. What it indicates instead is that in Europe the criteria and procedures for securing legal refugee status have become so restrictive that most migrants no longer bother to apply for it. In 2006, Germany for example counted only 20,000 petitions for political asylum, the lowest number since 1977. If we include the member states of the European Union (EU), that number rises to 200,000.3 However, the real story of the border regime, and its constriction of the category for legal entrance and residence, is in the rising body countThis article can also be found at the Monthly Review website, where most recent articles are published in full.Click here to purchase a PDF version of this article at the Monthly Review website.
Urban Studies · 15 Zitationen · DOI
Migration industry has recently emerged as a lens through which to theorise the intertwinement of non-state actors who aim to provide diverse migration-pertaining services. However, while much of their work is done in and through cities, consequently (re)forming variegated urban landscapes, scholarly literature has thus far neglected the nexus between cities and the migration industry. In this special issue, we begin filling this gap by exploring the significance of migration industries – as a resurgent concept and an area of research from migration studies – for understanding the urban. We start by reviewing the urbanisation of migration studies, highlighting its key limits. We then move on to introduce the migration industries debate, pointing out its existing implicit urban dimensions. We proceed by elaborating our main argument about why and how migration industries provide an especially productive lens for urbanists to consider. Specifically, we stress the three key analytical vantage points that the attention to migration industries enables us to see as central to contemporary city-making. These are its political-economic embeddedness, the urban-constitutive nature of trans-local connectivities, and how business-driven city-making dovetails with more serendipitous, bottom-up shaping of the arrival city. Each of these points also describes how individual papers speak to them. We conclude by briefly outlining a research agenda for migration industries that is thoughtfully embroiled in the (post-)pandemic urban.
Planning Theory & Practice · 12 Zitationen · DOI
Critical Planning · 10 Zitationen · DOI
Over the past 25 years, Berlin has undergone a rapid process of neoliberalization. This article argues that the city’s transformation has been heavily crisis-driven and fueled by a strong political agenda. Two watershed events are crucial for an in-depth understanding of the dynamics at work: The collapse of the German Democratic Republic (GDR) in 1989, followed by a neo-conservative and nationalist, entrepreneurial strategy for the reunified German Capital; and the financial crisis of 2001, which brought a coalition between Social-Democrats and Socialists into power that strongly emphasized Berlin’s (sub-)cultural and cosmopolitan identity, but effectively put the city on a fierce austerity track.
9 Zitationen · DOI
Through exploring the spatial conditions and materializations of caring practices and relations, this chapter aims at developing an urban(ized) understanding of care. It thereby seeks to interweave care debates into conceptual debates in urban studies and planning theory. The chapter discusses the tension between fields of care and ‘uncare’ as an analytical lens to situate care debates—and the ambivalences unfolding around them—within broader theoretical debates on cities, urbanization, and urban life. By taking a spatial perspective and by fostering an understanding of care geographies, three perspectives are developed: 1) How the scale of analysis and research in urban theory contributes to a wider understanding of the changing landscape of care; 2) how moments of presence and of encounters in public space allow both the acknowledgment and alteration of caring infrastructures; and 3) how care and crisis are fundamentally linked, and how care perspectives bear a potential to move analytical prisms beyond crisis-centered narratives.
The Wiley Blackwell Encyclopedia of Urban and Regional Studies · 6 Zitationen · DOI
Abstract The concept of insurgent citizenship emerged in the 1990s; it represents an attempt to better understand practices and discourses addressing entrenched regimes of inegalitarian citizenship. In contrast to much of the social movement literature, insurgent citizenship emphasizes the spatial dimension of citizenship movements as well as citizens' everyday practices in urban space. Hence the concept links concerns about urban planning and development to fundamental questions of social and political change. It also forms part of a broader trend to explore citizenship as a bottom‐up process of participation and contestation rather then a formalized status. Empirically, much of the work on insurgent citizenship has focused on struggles for rights and recognition in Brazilian metrolopolises, but recently scholars have also made use of the concept in exploring urban conflicts over citizenship in other countries of the Global South, as well as in the Global North.
5 Zitationen · DOI
Citizenship Studies · 4 Zitationen · DOI
The role of civil society actors in urban citizenship had been recently examined by scholars. This article provides an investigation of how such actors interfaced with the local state during the pandemic to facilitate migrants’ urban citizenship, namely their place-based rights and resources. It focuses on migrant-serving organizations (MSOs), which are understood as key agents of migrant urban citizenship-making. Drawing on empirical research in Berlin, Copenhagen, and Tel Aviv, we argue that while the three cities were impacted by similar national responses to the pandemic, varied local governance contexts, in conjunction with national migrant regimes, resulted in different urban responses. These differences were characterized by the distinct mediation practices of MSOs: bricolaging, bridging and building. While our article brings a more nuanced understanding of how urban citizenship landscapes are (re)produced in times of crises, the act of identifying and describing the three modes of mediation practices contributes to the theorization of the ways in which civil society helps to shape urban citizenship.
PERIPHERIE – Politik • Ökonomie • Kultur · 4 Zitationen · DOI
Keywords: Borders, Citizenship, Cities, Europe, Schengen Schlagworter: Grenzen, Burgerschaft, Stadt, Europa, Schengen
4 Zitationen
3 Zitationen · DOI
This chapter offers an introduction into the debates that provide the framework for my analysis. It presents a short overview of recent struggles over public space in Berlin and the shift towards new forms of activism at the intersection between protest and participation. The chapter explains in more detail the two examples of recent participatory processes in order to identify some of the dynamics through which movement building and the advancement of claims can be either furthered or blocked. It summarizes the arguments and outlines some of the implications for further research as well as for urban activism. The case of Berlin reveals that struggles over public space and public goods are shifting under the conditions of neoliberal urban governance. It is important to note that urban activism, participatory planning, and deliberative democracy should not be simply equated with each other.
Introduction
20212 Zitationen · DOI
This chapter discusses the emergence of new arrangements and innovations of care work, caring relations and practices, and how they materialize in (urban) space. New and innovative care models often arise as a result of structural inequalities, a lack of public care infrastructures, and struggles around the provision and recognition of care work. Despite their innovative character and their claim to challenge conditions of ‘uncare’ in cities, these new arrangements also turn out to be quite capable of being integrated into forms of neoliberal governance. The chapter draws on scholarly work conceiving care as a moral and political concept that has made fruitful contributions to welfare state research. It shows how a care perspective allows for rethinking the idea of citizenship at the local level, and how it offers a fundamental counter concept to the (neo)liberal ideal of the autonomous, self-sufficient, and independent citizen.
1 Zitationen · DOI
PROKLA Zeitschrift für kritische Sozialwissenschaft · 1 Zitationen · DOI
In recent years, the concept of ‘urban citizenship’ has become an important reference for cities and municipalities positioning themselves in the context of the European border and migration regime. However, the reference often falls short. Especially in the case of urban policies focusing on ‘diversity’, the affinity to neoliberal ideas of citizenship is noticeable. The article analyses the European ‘Intercultural Cities Programme’ (ICC), in which more than 100 cities participate, as an example for this trend. Here, the meaning of citizenship is being shifted
International Journal of Urban and Regional Research · 1 Zitationen · DOI
PROKLA Zeitschrift für kritische Sozialwissenschaft · 1 Zitationen · DOI
Entrepreneurial urban politics not only aim at up-grading a locality for interurban competition. Under the label of New Public Management, they also remodel the city administration according to economic criteria of efficency. As a result, the political arena for urban social movements is undergoing severe changes. In the case of Berlin, New Public Management reforms seem to disadvantage grassroots groups that protest the privatization of public space, and lead to a political gap between social movements and left political parlamentarians.
Investigative News in Education (Universidad de Costa Rica)
La migración internacional se ha convertido en un punto de articulación política de movimientos y partidos políticos de derecha y extrema derecha en diversas sociedades, tanto en Europa y Estados Unidos, como en países del Sur Global. \nPor años, incluso durante el fn de la Segunda Guerra Mundial, el tema era la emigración, es decir, dejar el país de nacimiento. Así se consigna, por ejemplo, en el artículo 13 de la Declaración Universal de los Derechos Humanos. \nHasta hace relativamente poco tiempo se describía a Estados Unidos como una nación de migrantes; hoy esta imagen parece escucharse mucho menos y más bien predominan narrativas que describen la migración como una “amenaza” (Sandoval, 2002, Chavez, 2008).
Consejo Latinoamericano de Ciencias Sociales. CLACSO eBooks · DOI
KZfSS Kölner Zeitschrift für Soziologie und Sozialpsychologie · DOI
International Journal of Urban and Regional Research · DOI
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Urban Citizenship-Making at Times of Crisis: Building Local-Level Resilience Among Migrants in Berlin, Copenhagen and Tel-Aviv
university
Urban Citizenship-Making at Times of Crisis: Building Local-Level Resilience Among Migrants in Berlin, Copenhagen and Tel-Aviv
university
Stammdaten
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- Name
- Dr. rer. pol. Henrik Lebuhn
- Titel
- Dr. rer. pol.
- Fakultät
- Kultur-, Sozial- und Bildungswissenschaftliche Fakultät
- Institut
- Institut für Sozialwissenschaften
- Arbeitsgruppe
- Stadt- und Regionalsoziologie
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- 26.4.2026, 01:08:22