Urban Studies and Social Policy December Seminar ('Social Sciences Hub')
Date: Wednesday 10 December 2025
Time: 15:30 - 17:00
Venue: Adam Smith Building - Room 386AB
Category: Conferences, Public lectures, Academic events, Staff workshops and seminars
Speaker: Stavros Stavrides

Speaker: Prof Stavros Stavrides, National Technical University of Athens

Discussant: Prof Andy Inch (Urban Studies and Social Policy, University of Glasgow)

Chair: Prof David Featherstone (Human Geography Research Group, University of Glasgow)

Abstract: Emergent urban communities may develop commoning as a practice of sharing based on relations of equality and mutual support. This is a multileveled and often contradictory process through which new forms of social organisation emerge. Urban commoning acquires an emancipatory potentiality when it challenges the everyday routines of social reproduction. Either by permeating everyday life or by creatively interrupting it during urban struggles, urban commoning practices reclaim spatial justice. Common spaces produced by the development of new urban habits and deviant urban rituals are to be understood as spaces in which spatial justice is performed and redefined. By using concrete examples from Europe and Latin America, this talk will argue that explicit and implicit efforts for collective self-management may construct emancipatory futures through commoning.

Bio: Stavros Stavrides is an architect, activist, and Emeritus Professor at the School of Architecture, National Technical University of Athens, Greece. He has done extensive research and fieldwork in Brazil, Uruguay, Argentina, Colombia, Venezuela and Mexico, focused on housing-as-commons and on urban struggles for self-management. He is a member of the NTUA Lab for the Architectural Design and Communication as well as of the independent Laboratory for the Urban Commons. His recent books: The Politics of Urban Potentiality: Spatial Patterns of Emancipatory Commoning (2024), Housing as Commons (co-edited with Penny Travlou, 2023), Common Spaces of Urban Emancipation (2019), Common Space. The City as Commons (2016), and Towards the City of Thresholds (2010).