Luis Bettencourt
Luis Bettencourt
Pritzker Director, Mansueto Institute for Urban Innovation; Professor of Ecology and Evolution, Biological Sciences Division
When do cities act on the challenges of their time? This project turned to administrative data from Fin de Siècle Vienna for insight, fostering dialogue among scholars of bureaucracy, emergence and urban politics. |
When do cities act on challenges of their time? As cities are again at the front lines of such social issues as public health and climate change, this pressing question defies answers tied to a single discipline.
This project turned to Fin de Siècle Vienna for insight. Vienna’s dramatic growth at the turn of the twentieth century provides a counterpoint to theories that suggest that thriving economies, progressive movements, and the reproduction of rational bureaucracy give rise to city administration. The expansion of Vienna’s administration followed on a collapse of mid-nineteenth-century economy and coincided with the rise of the Christian Social movement that allowed an anti-Semitic populist to take the reins amid “political and cultural chaos.” The formation of what was to become a behemoth of social welfare—under the auspices of a politically unimaginative government—highlights the interplay between social and humanistic change in literature, art, and philosophy.
This project put scholars of bureaucracy, organizational emergence, and urban politics into a conversation about the formation of a city administration in turbulent times. To catalyze this conversation, the research team examined the growth of the city from the viewpoint of the city itself. Computational text analysis of administrative literature created a new opportunity to trace the formation of the city of Vienna as it evolved from imperial agent to modern principal. This project had a notable social scientific significance. Yet bureaucratic change cannot be separated from the cultural history that challenged liberal ideology in fin de siècle Vienna, just like the rediscovery of cities today cannot be disentangled from the illiberal turn of the twenty-first century.
Pritzker Director, Mansueto Institute for Urban Innovation; Professor of Ecology and Evolution, Biological Sciences Division
Dean of the College; Martin A. Ryerson Distinguished Service Professor in the Department of History
Assistant Professor at Emlyon Business School;Visiting Fellow, Department of Sociology and the Mansueto Institute for Urban Innovation
Chair in Strategy and International Management
Professor of Organization Studies, Head of the Institute for Organization Studies, and Co-director of the Research Institute for Urban Management and Governance
Professor, Department of Political Science