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30. Urban Politics Melissa Marschall, Rice University, marschal@rice.edu The theme of this year’s conference is “Categories and the Politics of Global Inequalities.” Given both the historical and the contemporary role that urban spaces play in the production and reproduction of inequalities, whether in global cities like New York, Tokyo, and Mexico City, or more provincial cities such as New Orleans and Torino, this theme taps the myriad areas of inquiry central to urban politics research. Panels from past conferences have highlighted the way that norms, behaviors, and attitudes inscribe patterns of inequality in such areas as housing, schooling, employment, electoral participation, and civic involvement, via both formal institutions (zoning rules, mortgage lending practices, urban governing arrangements) and more informal or unconscious conventions (locational decisions, stereotyping, neighborhood context). We welcome panels and proposals that highlight these enduring issues and relationships. However we are also interested in work that highlights comparisons across jurisdictions in order to examine how various combinations of local, state/province, and national factors produce unequal outcomes. As the central hub for international labor pools, cities are faced with increasing complexities associated with immigrant populations. At the same time, urban |