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Urban Radar

Urban Radar

By: Tom Goodfellow and Beth Perry
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Summary

Urban Radar is a podcast series brought to you by Professors Tom Goodfellow and Beth Perry, which reflects on current events and emerging trends through the lens of cities and urban life. Drawing on the unique range of urban expertise in the Universities of Sheffield and Manchester, we place urban dynamics at the centre of contemporary global affairs.


Feedback:


Email: urbanradarpod@gmail.com

Instagram: @urbanradarpodcast


Credits:


Podcast production, presentation & editing: Tom Goodfellow & Beth Perry


Post-production editing & marketing: Polly Clifton


Production support: Jack Clayton


Distribution, promotion & marketing: Vicky Simpson


Music: Horizon (music by Tom Goodfellow, produced by Alan Thomson); Falling Down (music by Tom Goodfellow, performed by the Dice, produced by Alan Thomson); Ghosts (music by the Dice; produced by Alan Thompson); Kilimanjaro (music by Tom Goodfellow, produced by Alan Thompson).


Supported by the Universities of Sheffield and Manchester.

© 2026 Urban Radar
Politics & Government Science Social Sciences
Episodes
  • 25. ASYMMETRIC URBANISM: Pushback in Portland, +Palantir in Sheffield, +dunking in Trento, +adopting cities, +Pope vs Trump and more
    Apr 23 2026

    In this episode, Beth and Tom are joined by Ryan Bellinson, researcher/civil servant living in Portland, Oregon, US, to discuss how residents and community groups can mobilise their power to resist democratic backsliding.

    From Minneapolis to Portland federal immigration enforcement agents have been deploying hostile tactics to identify and seek to deport migrants, even those of legal status. Meanwhile federal programmes of support from housing to environmental protection are being slashed in part to finance massive increases in defence spending. The asymmetry between authoritarian and progressive forces is increasing. In this context, what powers and levers remain for grassroots groups and public bodies to push back?

    Go straight to 33:13 for this conversation.

    First, on the radar, they discuss:

    • Whether implementing Palantir's federal data platform in Sheffield could exacerbate health inequalities
    • What the Hillsborough Law has in common with ritualistic dunking in Trento, Italy
    • Food security in the context of the closure of the straits of Hormuz
    • Whether 'adopting' cities marks a new approach to post-war aid & reconstruction in Mykolaiv, Ukraine
    • Pope versus Trump: appeals to authority and the role of religion in African cities
    • Real estate in and around New York - what the media does and doesn't cover

    Guests:

    Ryan Bellinson is a former PhD student of the University of Sheffield and is now Community Innovation Strategist at the Oregon Department of Environmental Quality. He also co-leads the new Governing Together programme, working with Dark Matter Labs, and is an Honorary Senior Research Fellow in Cities, Climate and Innovation at University College London’s Institute for Innovation and Public Purpose.

    Read more:

    Healthy Soil, Healthy Food, Healthy People

    Nation of Neighbours

    Religious Urbanisation

    Public Banking Project

    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.

    Show More Show Less
    1 hr and 7 mins
  • 24. CHAOS AND DESIRE IN THE CITY: A conversation with Tanya Zack and Tanzil Shafique
    Apr 13 2026

    Come with us to Johannesburg and Dhaka in this month's feature. Visit the markets and stalls of Jeppe, in inner city Johannesburg, a dynamic ecosystem of informal traders, sometimes called Africa’s shopping Mecca. Head with us to Korail, an informal settlement of 300,000 dwellers, sometimes called Bangladesh’s largest slum.

    In this double book talk, we are joined by two critically-acclaimed authors. With Tanya Zack we discuss her book The Chaos Precinct: Johannesburg as a Port City, a narrative of how migrant Ethiopians have shaped this trading post in the inner city. With Tanzil Shafique we explore his book City of Desire: An Urban Biography of the Largest Slum in Bangladesh which challenges what and how we know the different desires of settlement-dwellers.

    Together we consider:

    • how global-local dynamics shape and are shaped by different urban places around the world
    • how formal and informal spaces in cities are managed, policed and regulated
    • the epistemic politics and positions of doing urban research

    Guests

    Tanya Zack is a South African urban planner and writer whose work has focused on urban regeneration, contemporary migration, informal work, urban policy and affordable housing. Her writing in Wake Up This Is Joburg (Duke University Press, 2022) has been lauded for being amongst the freshest and most original material on an African city. It was included in the longlist of the 2024 Sunday Times/Exclusive Books Literary Awards. The products of her professional practice in Johannesburg's inner city, including an inner-city transformation policy, and a study of cross border shopping, are recognised as ground-
    breaking interventions.

    Tanzil is Senior Lecturer of Urban Design at the Sheffield School of Architecture and Associate of the Urban Institute. Tanzil’s research looks at southern urbanism, pluriversal architectural practice and informal planning, mainly focusing on the ongoing adaptation and transformation due to climate change led by the local citizens. He is currently leading a dweller-led urban wetland restoration stewardship project in Dhaka and co-convenes the Platform for Just Housing (Najjyo Abashon Moncho or NAM), which works towards housing and climate justice with local activists and citizens.

    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.

    Show More Show Less
    56 mins
  • 23. PROPERTY AND URBICIDE: Housing in Lebanon, +Nairobi floods, +Banksy, +scam centres, +Habermas and more
    Mar 23 2026

    This month, Tom and Beth are joined by Hannah Sender, University of Sheffield, and Mariam Bazzi, Beirut Urban Lab to discuss how propertied families in small towns in Lebanon have responded to violence and displacement over the past years (Go to 35:04 for guests).

    When left with no savings, and little help to repair and reconstruct after military interventions, property becomes a moral relationship, as much as a personal asset: what ought housing to be used for, when urbicide becomes a core goal of warfare?

    Also on our radar:

    • Infrastructural causes of flooding in Nairobi
    • What Cubans in Miami reveal about how diaspora shape urban politics
    • Banksy's loss of anonymity in an era of surveillance capitalism
    • Data centre politics in the French local elections
    • Scam centres in Cambodia
    • Habermas, an unrecognised urbanist?

    Guests:

    Hannah Sender is a Leverhulme Early Career Fellow at the Urban Institute, University of Sheffield. Her current research examines land and housing relations in Lebanon.

    Mariam Bazzi is a researcher at the Beirut Urban Lab, working on cultural heritage destruction and reconstruction in Palestine and Lebanon. Previous work included tracking the urbicide in Gaza.

    And More:

    Compound capitalism - Ivan Franceschini, Ling Li, Mark Bo

    Capitalism and conflict at the margins - Xu Peng, Jonathan Goodhand, Patrick Meehan, Naomi Yonder

    Habermas and the City - Tommaso Vitale

    The Sheffield Declaration (see also episode 4)

    Planning and crisis - Mona Fawaz (see also episode 10)

    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.

    Show More Show Less
    1 hr and 6 mins
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