• 19. THE NEW URBAN GEOPOLITICS: Inside Caracas + urban Greenland, + embassies and disinformation in London, + neighbourhood governance and more
    Jan 26 2026

    In this first episode of Series 2 of Urban Radar, Beth and Tom start to tackle some of the many ways in which the current moment of geopolitical turmoil is filtering down into in cities and towns across the world.

    We make the most of our new Sheffield-Manchester partnership by bringing on Dr. Erika Garcia Fermin (29:45 minutes onwards) from the University of Manchester's Global Development Institute, for an in-depth conversation on the Venezuala crisis and its urban dimensions. With Erika we delve into Venezuela's recent history and how Hugo Chavez's distinctly urban populist project of redistribution morphed over two decades into extreme authoritarianism, mass population exodus and dysfunctional, disempowered city governments under Maduro.

    We then consider whether and how the dramatic US intervention and removal of Maduro might serve as a window of opportunity for opposition forces in the cities to reverse the tide of authoritarian, centralizing governance.

    Before, this, on our radar (from 05:40) we ponder:

    - The view from Greenland's capital, Nuuk, on potential US invasion and what this tells us about how urban areas are being geopolitically re-mapped

    - the approval of plans for a Chinese 'mega-embassy' in London and its local and geopolitical significance

    - Overlooked cities and towns in the US affected by Trumpian funding cuts and other 'erasures'

    - Reforms to neighbourhood governance in the UK, and the importance of the neighbourhood scale for addressing wider division and challenges to democracy

    - Dis/misinformation and crime stats in London, and the growing recognition of the need for urban anti-disinfo strategies

    - Iran's protest and the politics of physically relocating capital cities

    Guest:

    Erika Garcia Fermin completed her PhD at the Global Development Institute, University of Manchester, in 2024. Grounded in questions of urban governance and socio-spatial justice, her work focuses on the politics of value extraction in urban development, especially around urban land, and in how these processes relate to the ways urban spaces are planned, governed, and valued.

    Read More:

    https://thetruesize.com/

    Disinformation in the City: Response Playbook - https://www.unimelb.edu.au/__data/assets/pdf_file/0006/5060724/Disinformation-in-the-City-Reponse-Playbook_compressed-1.pdf

    Controlling the Capital: https://global.oup.com/academic/product/controlling-the-capital-9780192868329?cc=gb&lang=en&

    Hosts:

    Tom Goodfellow is Professor of Urban Development in the Global Development Institute, University of Manchester. His research focuses on the political economy of urban development and change in Africa, particularly the politics of urban land and transportation, conflicts around infrastructure and housing, and urban institutional change. (linkedin.com/in/tom-goodfellow-0b418441)

    Beth Perry is Professor of Urban Epistemics and Director of the Urban Institute at the University of Sheffield. Her research focuses on the relationships between urban expertise, governance and justice, underpinned by a commitment to co-producing collective intelligence across multiple scales to address complex urban challenges. She has worked in cities in Africa, Europe and the UK. (linkedin.com/in/itsbethperry)

    Email feedback to: urbanradarpod@gmail.com

    You can also follow us on instagram: @urbanradarpodcast

    Thanks to the Universities of Sheffield and Manchester for providing time, resources and equipment to support this podcast.

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    54 mins
  • Series 2 Urban Radar: Trailer
    Jan 5 2026

    Urban Radar is a podcast series which reflects on current events and emerging trends through the lens of cities and urban life.

    Launched in 2025, Urban Radar hit the UK social science podcast charts, and was amongst the top 5% of new podcast entrants (according to one major streaming platform!). It reached listeners in every continent, over 80 countries and 670 cities. Series 1 included 18 episodes, with 40 guests, including leading urban studies theorists and thinkers, early career scholars and PhD students.

    Series 2 of Urban Radar will continue to place urban dynamics at the centre of contemporary global affairs. Hosted by Professor Tom Goodfellow and Professor Beth Perry, guests will be drawn from across the Universities of Sheffield and Manchester in a new transpennine collaboration.

    In this Series 2 trailer, Tom and Beth reflect on the first year of recording Urban Radar and share what's coming up in 2026.

    Episodes will be released 1-2 times per month, including a monthly round-up of the urban issues underlying the headlines and in-depth discussions with guests. We will continue to invite members of our research communities to provide evidence-based informed insights into the ways that cities and urban communities are impacted by, driving and responding to current events.

    Hosts:

    Tom Goodfellow is Professor of Urban Development in the Global Development Institute, University of Manchester. His research focuses on the political economy of urban development and change in Africa, particularly the politics of urban land and transportation, conflicts around infrastructure and housing, and urban institutional change. (linkedin.com/in/tom-goodfellow-0b418441)

    Beth Perry is Professor of Urban Epistemics and Director of the Urban Institute at the University of Sheffield. Her research focuses on the relationships between urban expertise, governance and justice, underpinned by a commitment to co-producing collective intelligence across multiple scales to address complex urban challenges. She has worked in cities in Africa, Europe and the UK. (linkedin.com/in/itsbethperry)

    Email feedback to: urbanradarpod@gmail.com

    You can also follow us on instagram: @urbanradarpodcast

    Thanks to the Universities of Sheffield and Manchester for providing time, resources and equipment to support this podcast.

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    4 mins
  • 18: WRAP UP, REFLECTION & REVEAL (+ Care and the city, +Aussie social media ban, +urban themes of the year and much more...)
    Dec 16 2025

    This month, we (Beth and Tom) are podding alone, using the final episode of the year to reflect on some of the big themes we’ve discussed in 2025 as well as on the process of making Urban Radar. We start with our monthly radar for December, dipping into three current stories each as usual.

    Following this we offer some quick-fire thoughts on a number of issues and themes that have resurfaced repeatedly throughout the year and remain prominent as it draws to a close. Finally, we consider some of the highlights of podcasting itself, before unveiling a surprise in store for Series 2…

    On our monthly radar for December:

    • Care work and the city - from the UK’s current ‘carers scandal’ to Bogota’s care blocks
    • Urban ‘brandalism’, ZAP games and ‘subtervising’ (confused? Head to 9:15 to find out…)
    • The decline of trial by jury in the UK and what this might mean for urban justice and efforts to overcome spatial, class and linguistic bias
    • America’s new National Security Strategy and how this connects to Trump’s war on urban diversity
    • The Australian social media ban and its potentially different ramifications in urban vs rural areas
    • Syrian cities one year after the fall of Assad

    On our rapid fire ‘radar of radars’, we consider:

    • Military coups and their urban implications
    • Technology and public space
    • Flag urbanism and the branding of the city
    • The UK-Denmark anti-migration love-in
    • Solidarity, belonging and ‘urban lawfare’
    • The entanglements of local infrastructure and global finance
    • Urban warfare, critical minerals and strongman diplomacy

    Read More

    The Independent Review of Carer's Allowance Overpayments: A Welcome Step Towards Wider Reform of Welfare Benefits for Carers | the Centre for Care

    Caring Cities: Towards a Public Urban Culture of Care?

    Dismantling the advertising city: Subvertising and the urban commons to come

    Activating the playful city: A review of ludic urbanism and introducing the ludic continuum framework


    Hosts:

    Tom Goodfellow is Professor of Urban Development in the Global Development Institute, University of Manchester. His research focuses on the political economy of urban development and change in Africa, particularly the politics of urban land and transportation, conflicts around infrastructure and housing, and urban institutional change. (linkedin.com/in/tom-goodfellow-0b418441)

    Beth Perry is Professor of Urban Epistemics and Director of the Urban Institute at the University of Sheffield. Her research focuses on the relationships between urban expertise, governance and justice, underpinned by a commitment to co-producing collective intelligence across multiple scales to address complex urban challenges. She has worked in cities in Africa, Europe and the UK. (linkedin.com/in/itsbethperry)

    Email feedback to: urbanradarpod@gmail.com

    You can also follow us on instagram: @urbanradarpodcast

    Thanks to the Universities of Sheffield and Manchester for providing time, resources and equipment to support this podcast.

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    50 mins
  • 17: CHILD LABOUR AND DISINFORMATION (+immigration policy, +COP30 in Belem, +ticket touts, +urban statistics and more…)
    Nov 28 2025

    In this episode we are joined by Professor Julia Moses to consider the working lives and rights of children, and then Dr Dani Madrid-Morales to discuss disinformation and how it plays out across urban and rural areas. Reflecting on World Children's Day on 20 November, we explore children's rights and how these relate to questions of labour, as well as how attitudes to child labour have varied over time and in different national contexts (28:08). Then, in light of recent accusations from Donald Trump towards the BBC's reporting, we delve into the the challenge of misinformation, how it is changing and how it differs spatially across and within urban and rural areas (48:24).

    Also on our radar:

    • how policy learning between Denmark and the UK is shaping Labour's new 'hostile environment'
    • whether new curbs on ticket touts suggest lessons for wider market regulation
    • the deadly response to urban protests in post-election Tanzania
    • how Belem has shaped the agenda and design of COP30
    • whether the world is urbanizing faster than we think
    • what recent UK statistics on multiple deprivation tell us about urban decline

    Guests:

    Julia Moses is a Professor of Modern History in the School of History, Philosophy and Digital Humanities at the University of Sheffield. She is currently leading a project, funded by AHRC, on Global Socio-Economic Rights, Local Contexts, with colleagues at the Universities of Edinburgh, Dar es Salaam and Ruhr University Bochum. The call for the virtual exhibition, mentioned in the podcast, is here Virtual Exhibition – Call for Contributions! – Global Socio-Economic Rights, Local Contexts.

    Dr Dani Madrid Morales is a Lecturer in Journalism and Global Communication in the School of Information, Journalism and Communication at the University of Sheffield. He co-leads the Disinformation Research Cluster in his School. His own work studies the geopolitics of disinformation in Sub-Saharan Africa, particularly from an audience perspective. His latest book on this topic, co-edited with Herman Wasserman, is Disinformation in the Global South (Wiley). Dani also helps curate disinfoafrica.org, a website that brings together research on mis/disinformation in Africa.

    Hosts:

    Tom Goodfellow is Professor of Urban Development in the Global Development Institute, University of Manchester. His research focuses on the political economy of urban development and change in Africa, particularly the politics of urban land and transportation, conflicts around infrastructure and housing, and urban institutional change. (linkedin.com/in/tom-goodfellow-0b418441)

    Beth Perry is Professor of Urban Epistemics and Director of the Urban Institute at the University of Sheffield. Her research focuses on the relationships between urban expertise, governance and justice, underpinned by a commitment to co-producing collective intelligence across multiple scales to address complex urban challenges. She has worked in cities in Africa, Europe and the UK. (linkedin.com/in/itsbethperry)

    Email feedback to: urbanradarpod@gmail.com

    You can also follow us on instagram: @urbanradarpodcast

    Thanks to the Universities of Sheffield and Manchester for providing time, resources and equipment to support this podcast.

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    1 hr and 16 mins
  • 16: CHINA, THE GLOBAL INFRASTRUCTURE RACE AND ITS URBAN IMPACTS - A panel with Jon Silver, Zhengli Huang and Linda Westman
    Nov 13 2025

    In this feature, Tom and Beth discuss the Global Infrastructure Race with colleagues from the Urban Institute (UI), recorded live as part of the UI’s 10 year anniversary celebrations. Drawing on insights emerging from the GlobalCORRIDOR and Pluralize projects, Jon Silver, Zhengli Huang and Linda Westman share their interpretation of the Global Infrastructure Race, its urban impacts and how we can centre and decentre the role of China. Specifically they discuss:

    • What is the Global Infrastructure Race and how can we understand its diverse geopolitical and economic manifestations?
    • How can historical and contemporary analysis help unpack the role of China and Chinese investments?
    • What are the impacts on cities and urban inequalities of these activities in and beyond China?

    Guests

    Professor Jon Silver is an urban geographer interested in the uneven ways in which infrastructure is planned, operationalised and experienced, working across a range of cities in the global norths and south. He leads the GlobalCORRIDOR project.

    Dr Zhengli Huang works on Chinese investment in infrastructure across Africa. She worked and lived in Kenya and her fieldwork experience extends to Ethiopia, Uganda, Zambia, and Mozambique. She works on GlobalCORRIDOR and Pluralize.

    Dr Linda Westman focusses on climate politics, urban transformation, and sustainability discourses, including the policy/governance aspects of low-carbon development in cities in China. She leads the Pluralize project.

    Read More

    The Material Geographies of the Belt and Road Initiative

    Governing Climate Change in a Changing World

    Chinese Economic Zones in Africa

    Funding

    GlobalCORRIDOR (ID: 947779) funded by the European Research Council (ERC) under the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme.

    Pluralize was originally granted by the HORIZON Call: ERC-2022-STG and funded by UKRI (EP/Y00020X/1).

    Hosts:

    Tom Goodfellow is Professor of Urban Development in the Global Development Institute, University of Manchester. His research focuses on the political economy of urban development and change in Africa, particularly the politics of urban land and transportation, conflicts around infrastructure and housing, and urban institutional change. (linkedin.com/in/tom-goodfellow-0b418441)

    Beth Perry is Professor of Urban Epistemics and Director of the Urban Institute at the University of Sheffield. Her research focuses on the relationships between urban expertise, governance and justice, underpinned by a commitment to co-producing collective intelligence across multiple scales to address complex urban challenges. She has worked in cities in Africa, Europe and the UK. (linkedin.com/in/itsbethperry)

    Email feedback to: urbanradarpod@gmail.com

    You can also follow us on instagram: @urbanradarpodcast

    Thanks to the Universities of Sheffield and Manchester for providing time, resources and equipment to support this podcast.

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    1 hr and 17 mins
  • 15: GREEN RESURGENCE & GAZA RECONSTRUCTION (+Brexit, +rats, +Louvre heist, +AI Friend and more)
    Oct 31 2025

    Released to coincide with World Cities Day on 31 October, this episode sees Beth and Tom first joined by Prof. Matthew Flinders (26:09) to discuss what the rise in fortunes of the Green Party, UK, under Zack Polanski, means for progressive politics in the UK, and for a city like Sheffield. Then, with Said Zaaneen (51:46), they dive into what the history of refugee camps in the Gaza strip tells us about the role of international humanitarian aid, and consider implications for future reconstruction.

    Also on our radar:

    • The ongoing impacts of Brexit on Northern cities
    • Rats and multi-species urban life
    • Urbanisation, colonisation, colonialism & outer space
    • Cable cars, white elephants and Gen Z protests in Madagascar
    • The Louvre heist & the material fabric of the city
    • Why New Yorkers are not friends with AI Friend

    Guests:

    Matthew Flinders is Professor of Politics, Vice-President of the Political Studies Association and Chair of the Universities Policy Engagement Network. A former special advisor in both the House of Lords and House of Commons, he specialises in theoretically-informed policy-relevant research including on accountability, blame and democracy.

    Said Zaaneen is in the final stages of his PhD here at the University of Sheffield on Humanitarian aid, socio-spatial dynamics, and the evolution of refugee camps in the Gaza Strip, focusing particularly on two specific camps in Gaza - Jabalia and Deir Al Balah. Said also has an MSc in Management and Implementation of Development Projects from the University of Manchester, and prior to his PhD had more than 10 years experience working in humanitarian and development projects in the Gaza Strip.

    Read More:

    Madagascar protests: how ousted president Andry Rajoelina’s urban agenda backfired

    Decolonial Museology, Space Travel and the Mineral Cabinet | Museum & Society

    Hosts:

    Tom Goodfellow is Professor of Urban Development in the Global Development Institute, University of Manchester. His research focuses on the political economy of urban development and change in Africa, particularly the politics of urban land and transportation, conflicts around infrastructure and housing, and urban institutional change. (linkedin.com/in/tom-goodfellow-0b418441)

    Beth Perry is Professor of Urban Epistemics and Director of the Urban Institute at the University of Sheffield. Her research focuses on the relationships between urban expertise, governance and justice, underpinned by a commitment to co-producing collective intelligence across multiple scales to address complex urban challenges. She has worked in cities in Africa, Europe and the UK. (linkedin.com/in/itsbethperry)

    Email feedback to: urbanradarpod@gmail.com

    You can also follow us on instagram: @urbanradarpodcast

    Thanks to the Universities of Sheffield and Manchester for providing time, resources and equipment to support this podcast.

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    1 hr and 21 mins
  • 14: HUMANITY'S URBAN FUTURE - A conversation with AbdouMaliq Simone and Ash Amin
    Oct 20 2025

    In this month’s feature Tom and Beth are joined by two leading scholars of the urban condition - Ash Amin and AbdouMaliq Simone - to reflect on questions of inclusion and belonging in the search for the 'good city'. Building on their collaborative work for the Canadian Institute for Advanced Research's Humanity's Urban Future programme, our guests consider:

    • Are ideas of the good city still relevant in face of worsening inequality, segregation and individualism?
    • Can a progressive politics of belonging overcome these divisions in a renewed urban public sphere?
    • And, as Black History Month draws to an end, how might ideas of ‘black urbanism’ inform and enrich the field of urban studies?

    Guests

    AbdouMaliq Simone works on issues of spatial composition in extended urban regions, the production of everyday life for urban majorities in the Global South, infrastructural imaginaries, collective affect, global blackness, and histories of the present for Muslim working classes. He is Professor Emeritus at the Urban Institute (University of Sheffield) and co-director of the Beyond Inhabitation Lab, Polytechnic University of Turin. In this episode he draws on themes explored in his work including The Surrounds: Urban Life within and beyond Capture and Improvised Lives.

    Professor Amin (University of Cambridge) is known for his work on the geographies of modern living: cities and regions as relationally constituted; globalisation, race and multiculture as a hybrid of biopolitics, and vernacular practices. He was founding co-editor of the Review of International Political Economy, is associate editor of City and is a Fellow of the British Academy and the Academy of Social Sciences. In this episode we discuss his recent book After Nativism: Belonging in an Age of Intolerance and refer back to previous work including Seeing Like a City.

    Hosts:

    Tom Goodfellow is Professor of Urban Development in the Global Development Institute, University of Manchester. His research focuses on the political economy of urban development and change in Africa, particularly the politics of urban land and transportation, conflicts around infrastructure and housing, and urban institutional change. (linkedin.com/in/tom-goodfellow-0b418441)

    Beth Perry is Professor of Urban Epistemics and Director of the Urban Institute at the University of Sheffield. Her research focuses on the relationships between urban expertise, governance and justice, underpinned by a commitment to co-producing collective intelligence across multiple scales to address complex urban challenges. She has worked in cities in Africa, Europe and the UK. (linkedin.com/in/itsbethperry)

    Email feedback to: urbanradarpod@gmail.com

    You can also follow us on instagram: @urbanradarpodcast

    Thanks to the Universities of Sheffield and Manchester for providing time, resources and equipment to support this podcast.

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    1 hr and 3 mins
  • 13: CONFLICT & URBAN TERRITORY - FROM UK HOMELESSNESS TO UPRISING IN NEPAL (+West Bank settlements, +witchcraft, +cars and more)
    Sep 29 2025

    This month we are joined by Dr Sam Burgum & Professor Simon Rushton to dive into what the new UK Minister for Homelessness should have on their agenda (27:50) and how we can understand the wider socio-economic issues shaping the recent Gen Z uprising in Nepal (50:08).

    Cutting across our discussions are questions of conflict over and in urban territory, federalism and decentralisation and how best to meet basic needs - such as shelter, health or security at the local (and national) level.

    Also on our radar:

    • What does the new US-UK tech partnership mean for regional inequalities, and how might this be regulated?
    • The implications of extended settlements or 'outposts' in the West Bank
    • The urban dynamics of witchcraft
    • What 'Your Party' could learn from New Municipalism
    • Cities for cars not people? (and the masculinity of urban planning)
    • Who is left to report on local democracy and conflict? The global crisis in press freedom

    Guests:

    Sam Burgum is a Visiting Researcher at the Urban Institute and works on homelessness, property and trespass. He has written about squatting in London, the city as archive, and the importance of a historical understanding of property ownership and who has the right to urban space.

    Simon Rushton is Professor of International Politics in the School of Politics, Sociology and International Relations, working across issues including healthcare in Nepal and peace in Colombia. One recent co-authored book is Participating in Peace with a range of colleagues, and collaborated with CORMEPAZ, Plataforma IAP and PHASE Nepal.

    Read More:

    Corbyn's Momentum

    Beyond the local trap

    Becoming common of the public

    Roadkill

    Hosts:

    Tom Goodfellow is Professor of Urban Development in the Global Development Institute, University of Manchester. His research focuses on the political economy of urban development and change in Africa, particularly the politics of urban land and transportation, conflicts around infrastructure and housing, and urban institutional change. (linkedin.com/in/tom-goodfellow-0b418441)

    Beth Perry is Professor of Urban Epistemics and Director of the Urban Institute at the University of Sheffield. Her research focuses on the relationships between urban expertise, governance and justice, underpinned by a commitment to co-producing collective intelligence across multiple scales to address complex urban challenges. She has worked in cities in Africa, Europe and the UK. (linkedin.com/in/itsbethperry)

    Email feedback to: urbanradarpod@gmail.com

    You can also follow us on instagram: @urbanradarpodcast

    Thanks to the Universities of Sheffield and Manchester for providing time, resources and equipment to support this podcast.

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    1 hr and 20 mins