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    URBAN CONTESTATION IN A FEMINIST REGISTER

    Fran Klodawskyi

    Department of Geography

    Carleton University

    Janet Siltanen

    Department of Sociology and Anthropology

    Carleton University

    Caroline Andrew

    School of Political Studies

    University of Ottawa

    Forthcoming in Urban Geography, Theme Issue on Urban Contestation

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    ABSTRACT

    Approaches to urban contestation that challenge the dichotomy between institutionalization andopposition, and understand contestation as including engagement, are explored in this article. We

    set out how recent forms of feminist analysis and critical scholarship open up a conceptualterrain for such thinking and we ground our discussion with further details of City for All

    Women Initiative/ Initiative: une ville pour toutes les femmes (CAWI-ITVF) which we regardas a concrete (and successful) case. CAWI-ITVFs tactics and strategies are noteworthy because

    of the particular manner in which they have incorporated ideas drawn from feminist andprogressive organizing in other, including non-urban and non-Western, contexts. CAWI-ITVFs

    successes are most striking in relation to women who had previously felt totally alienated from

    local politics in Ottawa. The organizations rationale, strategies and tactics provide insights intothe ways in which women active in this network strategically use space to create new spatialities,and how their interactions in space are productive for creating new political subjects.

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    PART 1: INTRODUCTION

    It is January 26, 2005, at City Hall in Ottawa. It is budget time and all day, city

    councillors - seated in a semi-circle at the front of a large and imposing room - have been

    listening to public delegations. The early evening has been taken up with a well organized group

    of presenters both female and male, but all mature white and relatively well-off adults

    arguing to cut taxes and services, and raise public transit fares.

    Then, from the visitors area where individuals sit in rows (at the back of the room)

    waiting for their turn to speak, up gets a group of twelve women of every colour, age, size, shape

    and dress. The contrast could not have been more striking. All are wearing peach-coloured

    scarves as a symbol of their solidarity amidst differences. They begin with a song:

    Weve come to talk

    To share our views

    Cause when we vote, well think of you,

    We are women across this city

    We represent communities

    Please take the time

    To see our views

    We are the city that cares, includes

    Please bring alive the 20/20

    In our budget Two thousand Five

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    Nous sommes les femmes

    De toute la ville

    Well be happy if you will

    20/20 will work just fine

    In our budget Two thousand Five.

    The song was followed by two powerful, hard-hitting presentations: one, on the

    importance of grants to community groups, and the other, on the significance of good, accessible

    public transportation for those living on low and fixed incomes. The presenters were eloquent

    about the destructive impacts of isolation and marginalization when a cost-recovery orientation

    to public services such as recreation and public transportation, made access impossible. Their

    references to 20/20, the 2005 Official Plan that was developed on the basis of widespread

    public consultation but subsequently undermined due to economic pressures, indicated that this

    was an informed as well as an assertive public and its bilingual elements acknowledged Ottawas

    many French speaking residents.

    The impact of their presentation was palpable. The song had woken those who were

    dozing, worried those in charge of procedures, and energized still others. The women had

    achieved their first goal of making sure that councillors, bureaucrats and other presenters were

    paying close attention. These women were all graduates of training organized by the City for

    All Women Initiative/ Initiative: une ville pour toutes les femmes (CAWI-ITVF), on how to

    influence decision-making at City Hall.

    We begin our article with a description of this event in order to signal our interest in

    approaches to urban contestation that challenge the dichotomy between institutionalization and

    opposition, and that work with an understanding of contestation that includes political

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    engagement. CAWI-ITVFs tactics and strategies are noteworthy because of the particular

    manner in which their members have incorporated ideas drawn from feminist and progressive

    organizing in other, including non-urban and non-Western, contexts. CAWI-ITVFs successes

    are most striking in relation to women who had previously felt totally alienated from local

    politics in Ottawa. The organization uses space strategically to create new understandings of how

    politics works on the ground (new spatialities) and following from this, how their members

    interactions in spaces such as City Hall, community centres and neighbourhoods are productive

    in creating new political subjects (new subjectivities). Contestation in what we refer to as a

    feminist register signals the intriguing observation that while CAWI does not present itself as

    an explicitly feminist organization, many of its characteristics echo certain feminist perspectives

    and desires. The language of register refers to a musical tone that is distinctive but not easily

    captured in language, similar to the song referred to in the introduction. This song is not only a

    cleaver tactic but also something less easily articulated, having to do with a way of performing

    feminism that is embodied, multi-faceted and difficult to categorize.

    The significance of urban contestation as engagement will be explored in this article with

    the help of insights drawn from strands of feminist, critical geography, and social movement

    scholarship. We begin by setting out how our investigations and analysis are related to other

    theoretical discussions of interest to feminist urban geographers. In Part 2, we situate ourselves

    in relation to the subject and arguments of this paper, as well as summarizing CAWI-ITVFs

    genesis and current activities. This theoretical and contextual information forms the backdrop

    that underpins the presentation and analysis of our case study. CAWI-ITVFs story is usefully set

    within a broader political economy that has seen significant labour market restructuring over the

    past two decades, and in the relative power and significance of different levels of government in

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    Canada. However, CAWI-ITVFs strategies and tactics cannot be explained solely or even

    primarily through these macro-scale and structural drivers. They also have to do with the manner

    in which circumstances, ideas, resources and relationships have come together in space and time

    and out of which, new spatialities and subjectivities have emerged (Staeheli & Kofman 2004;

    Fincher 2004; Martin 2004). We explore these latter arguments in Part 4.

    PART 2: THEORETICAL OPENINGS FOR UNDERSTANDING NEW FORMS OF URBAN

    CONTESTATION

    This article contributes to ongoing efforts on the part of feminist political

    geographers and other critical scholars to explore and learn from diverse, emplaced actors who

    are being political, yet whose activities typically are unacknowledged and/or denigrated

    (Staeheli et al, 2004; Nagar et. al., 2002). We see ourselves as contributing to scholarship that is

    challenging heretofore unexamined categorizations and dualisms, that highlights the value of

    situated knowledge inclusive of multiple perspectives, and that is explicit about a commitment to

    progressive social change (Kofman and Peake 1990; Staeheli and Kofman, 2004, p.1). Our

    particular interest aligns closely with Wekerles explorations of: how urban citizens have

    mobilized movements to meet the needs of everyday life in response to neoliberal restructuring

    and structural adjustment, how they have created spaces within the local state for feminist

    policies, and how they have forged transnational networks to link movements in a global civil

    society (2004, p. 245). Within this area of scholarship, we have a particular interest in women

    who are typically regarded as other in relation to urban politics, such as newcomers, those who

    are indigenous, poor and/or those who are differently abled. These women are central to CAWI-

    ITVF and to our research. Here we look to what scholarship offers by way of insights about

    when and how such women engage in and are recognized as political actors. Three areas of

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    literature have been particularly insightful: prefigurative politics; the politics of becoming in

    place; and actually existing urban neoliberalisms.

    (a) Prefigurative Politics

    An interest in prefigurative forms of political activity was one legacy of 1980s feminism.

    With connections among feminisms and between feminist and left politics in a state of tension,

    Sheila Rowbotham, Lynne Segal and Hilary Wainwright (1979) articulated a need for a new

    approach to political activism that acknowledged diverse oppressions, and practiced a politics

    that gave as much attention to the processes of political activism as to its ends. In contrast to

    hierarchical and prescriptive forms of mass political organization, and platforms that promised

    desired changes only after proper political alignments, these authors argued for an enabling

    approach to difference, and stressed the power of incorporating elements of desired futures into

    evolving presents. This was an intervention that would continue to reverberate, inspiring feminist

    and other activists for social justice to reconsider and reconfigure the understanding, analysis and

    practices of political activism. Their insights have raised important questions about the how and

    what of feminist research. During the 1980s and 1990s, their arguments, together with many

    other interventions that were informed by Foucauldian, critical race and post-colonial analysis

    (Foucault xxxx; Spivak xxxx), profoundly destabilized assumptions about the significance of ,

    and approaches to studying everyday resistance at the local level (hooks xxxx; Escobar xxxx).

    Since that time, critically engaging the concept of agency among individuals with apparently

    little power has been the subject of considerable, on-going debate and reflection (Gibson-

    Graham 2006; Isin and Ustundag 2008; Pain 2009). In parallel with these discussions,

    explorations of appropriate methodologies to investigate these matters have also been in play.

    There is a growing literature that questions whether or not feminist and other critical social

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    science methodologies, such as participatory and action research, provide pathways to

    investigation that avoid the disciplining and often exploitative tendencies of more mainstream

    approaches to knowing (Kesby 2005; Kindon et al xxxx; Naples xxxx).

    (2) The Politics of Becoming in Place

    Both Gibson-Grahams (2006)A Postcapitalist Politics, and Harcourt and

    Escobars Women and the Politics of Place (2005) offer readings of place-based globalism that

    we see as salutary extensions of these earlier efforts. For Gibson-Graham, an evolving post-

    structural critique of (capitalist) economic reification has translated into action research that

    includes the self-cultivation of subjects (including ourselves) who can desire and enact other

    economies in multiple sites (2006, p. xxiii).Their political ambition has been to release and

    cultivate the potential inherent in diversity and in already-existing alternative practices to

    disorder, dislocate, dis-identify and unfix hegemonic understandings and projects. This ambition

    applies also to the creation of new political subjects. They identify a counter hegemonic politics

    as involving dis-identification with the subject positions offered by a hegemonic discourse and

    identification with alternative and politically enabling positions (Gibson-Graham, 2006, p. 77).

    Links between dynamics of place and the global are also central to their thinking. They are

    considered to be coproduced, and this coproduction is regarded as a strong resource for political

    possibility. They offer a vision of global transformation through the accretion and interaction of

    small changes in place (Gibson-Graham, 2006, p. 196). As they note, the global reach of second

    wave feminist politics was due to the ubiquity of place-based feminist activism, and networking

    across places. Harcourt and Escobar (2005) see Gibson-Grahams analysis and ongoing activities

    as very much in line with their own ideas about place based globalism: [t]he sense of

    globality is not [a] search for universal validity or an all-embracing global reality but one

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    that seeks to preserve heterogeneity and diversity, even as, and precisely through, new kinds of

    alliances and networking that we refer to as self-organizing, decentralized and nonhierarchial

    meshworking. In short, these [women and the politics of place] movements want to be

    practicing, already, the kinds of worlds they would like to bring into being (2005, p 14). These

    authors emphasize the value of a politics of the coproduction of subjects and places. A politics

    of becoming in place (Gibson-Graham, 2005, p. 131). In this formulation there is a recognition

    that women are already everywhere engaged in constructing and revitalizing places in response

    to the exigencies and possibilities of their everyday lives (Gibson-Graham, 2005, p. 132).

    Placed-based activism is the cornerstone of a Women and the Politics of Place (Harcourt and

    Escobar 2005) framework Place, like the subject, is the site and spur of becoming, the opening

    for politics (Gibson-Graham, 2005, p. 132). We see in these arguments, a strong justification for

    further investigating how women such as those involved in CAWI become engaged in place-

    based politics in the first place. What these sets of authors do not bring into the analysis to date,

    however, is a concerted focus on embodied urban politics, despite (or perhaps because of?) the

    increasingly neoliberally-framed, and growing, economic and political significance of cities

    throughout the world.

    (c)Actually Existing Urban Neoliberalisms

    Since the 1990s, various scholars have documented the harsh disciplining tendencies that

    government retrenchment and restructuring have had on equality seeking groups in cities

    (Boudreau et al, 2009; Cohen and Pulkingham, 2009; Shragge and Fontin, 2000). This

    scholarship has noted the ways that community organizing principles were often subverted to

    conform to pressures to keep down costs and reduce expectations of what governments should

    provide for citizens. For example, authors such as deFilippis, Fisher and Shragge (2006), and

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    Peck (2001) have raised important questions about the manner in which community

    organizations have sometimes ended up implementing governments fiscal (and social) goals

    rather than the objectives of the organizations. Frequently, these disciplining tendencies have

    been brought together and described under the umbrella term neoliberalism, a term that has

    become more and more dominant as both explanation and analytic frame (Larner 2003).

    However, a consensus is emerging that greater nuance is required in the analysis of

    neoliberalizing effects on urban politics and policies, for four sets of reasons that are relevant to

    our analysis.

    First, the operation of neoliberalizing tendencies needs to be contextualized within a

    broader appreciation of diverse factors and forces operating to shape the direction and character

    of urban politics more generally. In other words, neoliberalization is increasingly recognized as

    not the only phenomenon in operation. This point has been made recently by Jessop et al (2008)

    who advocate for a more polymorphous characterization of factors at work within urban

    discourse and practice, including attention to the diverse spatialities of politics as located in and

    interacting with territories, places, scales and networks. They and other commentators encourage

    the further exploration of concrete-complex examples in order to further refine their arguments

    (Katz 2004; Mayer 2008). Second, the need to attend to how specificities of time, space and

    place shape the interpretations and enactments of neoliberalization is increasingly emphasized.

    As several commentators in Leitner, Peck, Sheppard (2007) stress, these need to be understood

    as particular expressions conditioned by the history and complexity of local conditions.

    Neoliberalization may have general traits, but these are specified, interpreted and realized in the

    unique contexts of localities. Larner, LeHeron and Lewis (2007) go further in asserting that

    neoliberalism is more usefully conceived of as a series of somewhat discrete and dynamic

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    projects and that it is only through both interpretation and interpenetration that these political

    projects have begun to take on sameness rather than difference, alignment rather than

    divergence (p.227).Third, there is growing interest in examining social movements as being

    relationally intertwined with what is understood as the state (Goldstone 2003). As McAdam

    notes,the results of protest are not simply related to the scale or intensity of mobilization and

    protest activity. Interactions with political leaders and agendas, as well as shifting state, public

    and elite responses, can either produce dramatic changes from relatively modest mobilization or

    frustrate even widespread popular protest activities (2003, p. xv).In this view, the field within

    which social transformations as an outcome of politics might be imagined, is more complex but

    also more multi-faceted than more dichotomous presentations might suggest. Through the lens of

    social movements, McAdam hints at what Larner et al assert. Namely, that it is only through an

    appreciation of the implications of such a framing [of neoliberalism as ongoing and evolving

    political projects,] does it become possible to open up possibilities for multiple political

    interventions (p. 277). In other words, only by gaining more knowledge about the discourses

    and actions that promote neoliberal framings is it possible to identify political strategies that

    encourage qualitatively different outcomes.

    Lastly, while explorations about democratic governance and participation in neoliberal

    times continue to proliferate, North American and European scholarship has devoted little

    attention to ideas about the recruitment and engagement of new political actors. In contrast to

    Latin American scholarship on the subject of engagement, there is a gap between the growing

    interest in deliberative and participatory tools of governance, and a lack of focus on the

    circumstances that influence political take up by currently disengaged residents. The powerful

    arguments put forward by Paulo Friere (1972) - that learning to critically conceptualize their

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    society is a necessary precondition of peoples willingness to engage in political activities - have

    been neglected in recent urban and Western literature on deliberation and participation

    (Beaumont and Nichols 2008).

    Insights from these four areas of literature have reinforced our sense that there is

    something important to learn from an extended case analysis of CAWI-ITVF. As will be

    discussed below, our privileged position with regard to this organization has provided an entry

    point into research that we hope will contribute new insights about the kinds of organizations

    that Hamel, Lustiger-Thaler, Mayer (2000, p. 1) refer to as transfunctional urban social

    movements. Like CAWI-ITVF, these movements:

    are not fearful of institutionalization. In many cases they seek it out. They arecorporatist and increasingly find expression in partnerships of all stripes and

    countenances, if the strategic environment is so predisposed. The latter, however, do notacct for all their functions. They have another embedded characteristic: they are key to

    the social construction of conflict within the city Their transfunctionality bringstogether service roles and conflict roles, as they pre-score the scripts and narratives of

    local politics (Hamel, Lustiger-Thaler, Mayer 2000, p. 1).

    Although CAWI-ITVF is not a service organization in the narrow sense of the term, it does

    provide vital educational opportunities and discursive spaces for exploring how urban politics in

    Ottawa might be practiced in line with its participants goals and hopes. By also being a playerat

    City Hall, the organizations members see the possibility of their own future engagement within

    mainstream decision-making, albeit on a terrain that they have helped define.

    PART 3: LOCATING OURSELVES, LOCATING CAWI

    Research about and with CAWI-ITVF is a relatively recent development in a much

    longer and multi-faceted history of our involvement with this organization. All of the authors

    have long been engaged scholars at the municipal level in the sense of having participated in a

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    variety of endeavours related to local area social issues. For two of us Andrew and

    Klodawsky involvement in issues relating to womens public safety concerns, both locally and

    internationally, has been of long-standing import. CAWI-IVTFs inception in 2002 is the most

    recent phase of multiple initiatives since 1989 to engender Ottawas City Hall, in collaboration

    with local politicians committed to encouraging the greater engagement of women in local

    politics. Our growing excitement about the emerging ethos (register?) of both CAWI and

    another organization in which we have both been involved Women and Cities International

    (WICI) spurred on the crafting of a research project structured around the assertion that there

    were theoretical insights to be gained by approaching the two organizations as paradigmatic

    examples worthy of being examined as extended case studies (Flyvbjerg 2001). Specifically,

    these theoretical goals were to explore: the significance of feminist community organizations

    for increasing the involvement of minority women in political activities, at the local level and

    beyond, the strategic significance of scale [and] attention to [how] the everyday personal and

    organizational experiences of feminist organizing can shed light on ways to challenge inequality

    (Klodawsky 2007). The focus of this article is on the latter element. Given Andrew and

    Klodawskys positionalities vis--vis CAWI, it made theoretical and particularly methodological

    sense to invite a third scholar Siltanen to participate in this endeavour. Her more distanced

    relationship with CAWI combined with her own experiences as an engaged scholar and her

    methodological acumen made her the ideal third for our team. After receiving enthusiastic

    support from members of CAWI-ITVF and WICI, we applied for and were successful in

    receiving funds from Canadas Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council in 2008 for a

    three-year programme of study. Our investigative methodologies have included a range of

    qualitative approaches, including: in-depth interviews, reflexive conversations among the

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    researchers, document analysis, and participant and non-participant observation. In the

    discussion that follows, we begin by presenting our understanding of CAWI-ITVFs genesis and

    evolution as best situated within the context of two somewhat related but distinctive processes at

    play at the beginning of the 21st

    century in Canada: on the one hand, new economic, political and

    social pressures associated with globalization and felt especially in Canadian cities, and on the

    other hand, the manner in which Canadian immigration policy has intersected with these political

    economic changes.

    (a) Canadas changing political economy

    Since the early 1990s, Canadian cities have been the places where employment

    opportunities are most likely to be found, but they have also been sites where the growing gap

    between rich and poor has been the most clearly visible. Urban residents have faced harsh market

    logics in numerous aspects of their lives. Although cities have also been acknowledged as the

    spheres of growing ethno-cultural diversity and complexity, their capacities to develop the means

    to address competing demands and diverse sets of needs and supports have been extremely

    limited. Senior governments reluctance to cede adequate resources to large municipalities has

    been a major contributor to this dilemma, despite growing evidence that the negative impacts of

    resource/demand mismatches are mostly likely to occur within these places and particularly

    among certain marginalized populations (Boudreau et al., 2009). In part, this mismatch has

    occurred due to the historical legacy of how local governments have been understood: as minor

    players whose mandates have been most particularly to provide hard infrastructure and other

    expenditures destined to support private development (Tindal and Tindal, 2004).

    In Ottawa, these experiences have been coupled with the citys unique situation as both a

    mid-sized municipality and the seat of the federal government. Early suspicion of the

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    motivations for federal government involvement in local affairs have continued to the present

    day. Local councillors have recognized the federal governments significance to the local

    economy but they also have retained a scepticism about federal motives in the region and have

    therefore been enthusiastic boosters of high-tech development in an effort to reduce the citys

    economic dependence on the federal government. One outcome has been a pre-occupation on the

    part of some elected officials (both mayors and councillors) to ensure that taxes are kept as low

    as possible. Unlike some other Ontario cities that have contested these logics and rationalized the

    need for increased tax rates, Ottawa has been led by politicians whose primary concerns have

    been fiscal responsibility

    ii

    . Some politicians and, even more so, staff see CAWI-ITVFs

    innovative strategies and tactics as a means of incorporating innovative approaches to promote

    diversity into a bureaucracy and political culture preoccupied with fiscal stringency.

    But City Halls interest in engaging with CAWI-ITVF has not been solely or even

    primarily driven by economic pressures and an orientation of fiscal conservatism. The City of

    Ottawa also has had a tradition of progressive Catholic social action that values caring for the

    less fortunate and caring as a part of the social responsibility of living in a community. For some

    local politicians and residents, this tradition remains as an important characteristic: caring for the

    unfortunate is often seen as the correct way to act, rather than part of a coherent policy stemming

    from an analysis of root causes. This influences the way in which the City regards CAWI-ITVF:

    an anomaly in terms of the classical areas of municipal activity not seen to include promoting

    gender equality; a responsibility of the federal government vis--vis immigration policy, and the

    province vis--vis social policy; but also as a group to be helped and protected.

    (b) Canadas changing immigration policies

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    The story of CAWI-ITVF is also inextricably linked to the recent evolution of

    immigration policy and trends in immigration to Canada. Since the early 1990s, federal

    immigration policies have shifted in favour of increasing the number of immigrants in the

    economic class, in an attempt to improve their economic outcomes but also in line with the

    growing focus on economic benefits over other values, such as family reunification and refugee

    settlement. Ironically though, during the same period that federal immigration policies were

    adjusted to favour of those with advanced formal education and specialized training, changes in

    the domestic economy were creating a growing mismatch between the kinds of immigrants that

    Canada was welcoming, and the kinds of characteristics favoured by domestic employers

    (Sweetman and Warman (2008).

    The negative implications of these processes are clearly very important to the many

    CAWI-ITVF members who are immigrants. They tend to be well-educated, with successful

    careers in their countries of origin. Many of them decided to come to Canada so that their

    children would have better lives, and therefore were aware that, to some extent, they would be

    sacrificing their careers to further these goals. But despite this acceptance of starting again, as

    women who have a sense of their own worth and their potential to contribute significantly to

    their new setting, the discouraging labour market environment has had negative impacts. Often

    this sense of self-worth has been worn down or even quashed through early difficult years in

    Canada and the non-recognition of their previous employment experience. The result is often the

    production of two somewhat contradictory positions: a sense of discouragement and loss of sense

    of worth, coupled with a strong sense of agency and determination. They want to be accepted

    and included in Canadian society while at the same time they do not want to reject their cultural

    origins.

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    Participation in CAWI-ITVF is part of what can be considered a political strategy on the

    part of these women. Most have been, or are still, active in ethno-specific organizations and one

    of the clear characteristics of CAWI-ITVF is that it is a mixed organization of women. Not only

    does it bring together immigrant women from different national backgrounds, it also includes

    diverse women born in Canada. Linked to the sense of agency and determination mentioned

    above, CAWI-ITVF has become an opportune channel for immigrant women who want to both

    honour their home culture and at the same time become active in mainstream organizations. This

    is a choice made by each individual but the presence of a number of women who have made a

    similar choice does mark the organization and it has also attracted the involvement of indigenous

    women and women with disabilities with somewhat similar characteristics and motivations.

    It is within this context that we now turn to exploring CAWI-ITVF as an organization

    that is both a partner with the City of Ottawa and an oppositional community voice. An

    intriguing element of CAWI-ITVF is that its participants seek institutionalization as a means of

    shifting City Hall priorities to align with their own felt concerns. Their interest in

    institutionalization is both pragmatic and principled they want to be part of City Hall in order

    to shift its logic to one that is more in keeping with their own views of what an inclusive city

    should be and they want , as well, to benefit from this shifted logic. In seeking out

    institutionalization, CAWI-ITVF mimics the transfunctional urban social movements described

    by Hamel et al (2000, p. 1.

    (c) CAWI-ITVFS Genesis and Evolution

    In a formal sense, CAWI-ITVF-IVTF began in November 1999, when the then Regional

    Council of Ottawa-Carleton endorsed an International Union of Local Authorities (IULA)

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    Declaration on the role of women in local government and agreed to set up a Working Group on

    Womens Access to Municipal Services (Andrew et. al., 2004; Andrew and Klodawsky, 2006).

    This phase of activity led to the conclusion that, although there were a number of interesting

    initiatives within the City, there was no overall consideration of gender equality, much less

    gender equality within the context of the full diversity of women. This insight emerged in part as

    a result of becoming informed about other public space feminist organizing efforts directed at

    the local level, both in Canada and internationally (Whitzman, 2006).

    The interventions and recommendations of the Working Group on Womens Access to

    Municipal Services led to a second phase of the project, now renamed the City for all Women

    Initiative/Initiative: une ville pour toutes les femmes, where the intent was to establish a more

    formal partnership with City Hall and embark on a much more ambitious set of goals: to

    institutionalize the effective consideration of gender and equality throughout the municipality.

    Both initiatives were supported by funds sought for and received from Status of Women Canada.

    It is noteworthy that the involvement of Andrew and Klodawsky, as academics, together with in

    kind (but not financial) support from the City of Ottawa, were pivotal in convincing Status of

    Women Canada that these initiatives were worthy of their support. The earlier projects legacy

    included important insights about how staff support should be acknowledged. In the earlier

    endeavour, staff were assigned to participate in the Working Group as an add on to their other

    activities without formal acknowledgement, despite the considerable work involved. Their

    efforts were critical in moving to the next phase insofar as they provided vital lessons to the

    academic and community women about how to get things done at City Hall. The value of this

    insight and the importance of ensuring that staff involvement would be formally recognized in

    the future, were key components in the second funding proposal, together with an equally

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    assertive claim about the need for a full-time paid coordinator. CAWI benefited tremendously

    from Status of Women Canadas willingness to respond positively to these arguments. Unlike the

    Working Group arrangement, CAWI-ITVFs establishment involved an agreement with the City

    that staff involvement would be formally recognized. The ability to hire a coordinator was a

    second factor that distinguished the second phase from the first, but what was particularly

    noteworthy here was the knowledge, skills, commitment and orientation of the person who was

    ultimately hired. Not only did she bring a background in adult education and critical pedagogy to

    the position. She also saw and encouraged myriad political possibilities, both bottom up (insofar

    as she has worked tirelessly to help community women become effective in their lobbying

    efforts) and top down (she also identified and/or supported appropriate kinds of involvement

    with the municipality and strived to take advantage of whatever opportunities were on offer).

    For example, when the second phase got started early in 2004, City Hall was caught up in

    a budget crisis and unable to immediately follow through on its commitments to work with

    CAWI-ITVF. The organization then decided to begin by consulting with a variety of community-

    based womens groups, especially among marginalized women, asking them about their

    experiences with the City of Ottawa. What became abundantly clear was that womens groups,

    particularly those who were racialized minorities and/or who were from recently arrived ethno-

    cultural communities, felt that they did not have the necessary knowledge about the structures

    and processes of municipal government to even approach City Hall, much less influence it.

    Municipal government was seen as something distant, complex and unapproachable. This led

    CAWI-ITVF to seek provincial community development funds to set up a program Civic

    Participation Training - to help women acquire the skills to help them in this task. The training

    was seen as a means to empower women from marginalized communities to be able to assert

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    That the partnership between the City of Ottawa and City for All WomenInitiative/Initiative: une ville pour toutes les femmes be renewed with the aim of

    enabling the full-diversity of women be included in city decision making.

    That the City of Ottawa continue to assign 2-3 managers to participate in the SteeringCommittee and continue to allocate staff time to work with the initiative as needed.

    That the City of Ottawa and Community and Protective Services, as the leaddepartment, work with the City for All Women Initiative/Initiative; une ville pour

    toutes les femmes to ensure that the goal, of implementing practices and strategic

    plans that increase gender sensitivity and enhance gender equality, is realized.

    their communitys concerns at City Hall. Recruitment to the initiative was based on both

    individual characteristics and affiliation with a particular groups networks, in order to assure

    that each womans learning would be shared with her home community

    Simultaneously, as circumstances became more favourable, CAWI-ITVF worked to

    partner with City Hall around the goal of making its decision-making practices and programs

    more explicitly inclusive of diverse intersectional identities. The motion approved on May 5,

    2005 was regarded as an extremely significant moment in CAWI-ITVFs history (Fig 1), and it

    also illustrates the rather typical manner that the City of Ottawa practices its progressive

    impulses.

    Fig. 1. Recommendations approved by Health, Recreation and Social Services

    Committee on May 5, 2005

    This motion encapsulated a nascent acknowledgement that the full-diversity of women should

    somehow be more recognized and more present in decision-making at City Hall, not only

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    through the efforts of delegations such as the one described in the opening paragraphs, but also

    through input into key programs and practices.

    In order to enact these multiple roles, CAWI-ITVF has developed an organizational style

    and approach to decision-making that reflects this multi-dimensional mandate. CAWI-ITVFs

    key decision-making body is a Steering Committee comprised of CAWI-ITVF staff (typically 1-

    3 individuals), between 5 and 8 community women (selected after an invitation to apply), 2

    academic advisors (who have been Andrew and Klodawsky since inception) and 2 City Hall staff

    (see Fig 2).. Since May 2005, CAWI-ITVF has proposed and developed a pilot gender equality

    training guide for city managers, and, based on the success of this project, has been engaged by

    the city on a fee-for-service basis to develop an equity and inclusion lens incorporating eleven

    marginalized groups.

    But these efforts by no means encompass CAWI-ITVFs active presence in Ottawa, as

    Figure 2 also illustrates. In a broad range of venues both within and outside City Hall, and as part

    of broader coalition efforts to reduce structural barriers for CAWI-ITVF women and others (such

    as those represented in anti-poverty campaigns), CAWI-ITVF has articulated human rights and

    economic and social justice arguments about the need to recognize the claims of the full diversity

    of women. It is thus clearly understood that some aspects of CAWI-ITVFs agenda are outside

    the purview of City Hall staff but not so other members of CAWI-ITVFs Steering Committee.

    PART 4: ENACTING CONTESTATION: IN AND AGAINST THE STATE

    The places that City Hall, and Ottawa more broadly, are becoming, and the subjects that

    are being created, are thoroughly implicated with the multiple processes outlined above. As we

    see it, CAWI-ITVF is a contemporary manifestation of prefigurative feminist politics and it is

    also one example of a politics of place, albeit one that is impacted by neoliberalizing strands of

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    governance. Explicitly, it has adopted a very particular, hybrid ethos or register in its quest to do

    feminist local politics differently: institutionalization is sought to challenge both bodies and

    structures: bodies in the sense of how CAWI-ITVF women understand and place themselves vis-

    -vis politics and the city, and structures in the sense of how decision-making takes place,

    including a view of politics as a spatialized multi-scalar and networked phenomenon (Jessop et

    al, 2008). In doing so, CAWI-ITVF has not only raised questions about current political

    arrangements at City Hall; equally it has challenged status quo spatialities that seem to favour

    only certain types of bodies and perspectives. At a variety of scales and in a variety of places and

    networks, CAWI-ITVF has aimed to reconfigure these relations and their outcomes by disrupting

    and redesigning the who, what, how and where of city politics; in the wake, new subjectivities

    and new spatialities are co-constituted. By exploring how CAWI-ITVF has promoted the

    engagement of bodies not typically seen at City Hall, the aim of this section is to connect its

    politics of becoming in place and its focus on engagement, to the arguments presented above.

    (a) New Subjectivities

    The song mentioned at the outset was one womans suggestion on how to get the

    councillors to sit up and take notice but it was also a reflection of CAWI-ITVF members

    emerging understanding of how best to make claims on the municipality. Prior to developing

    these sorts of performances, the women had to see themselves as able to contest taken-for-

    granted hegemonic understandings that were at odds with their own lived experiences. This

    involved a two-pronged process. They needed to recognize and appreciate similarities amid

    differences: though only some women might prefer dedicated single sex swim times for example,

    the lack of attention to diverse womens recreational needs was a rationale for challenging how

    recreation plans were decided upon more generally. At the same time, this kind of cerebral

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    analysis was not sufficient. Also required was an embodied sense of entitlement that was

    intertwined with visions of possible futures (and a vision of a possible present) where City Halls

    decision-making capacities would be harnessed to their claims, not as individual plaintiffs but

    rather as a collective actor demanding that diversity serve not as an excuse but rather as a

    resource.

    CAWI-ITVF has made over 20 formal presentations to various city bodies and when they

    do so, peach scarves are always present. Organizing includes the effort to have as large a number

    of diverse women as possible attending, to lend visible support to the presenters. CAWI-ITVF

    conveys itself as a representation of diverse marginalized womens voices in Ottawa and so this

    visualization is an important element in CAWI-ITVFs message they are trying to convey the

    voices of all those groups who have difficulties making their views known at City Hall. In this

    sense, the image of CAWI-ITVF as a partnership involving the City, community-based

    womens groups and the universities strengthens CAWI-ITVFs ability to challenge business as

    usual: we are a part of the City and as a partner, you cannot ignore us.

    CAWI-ITVFs goal of engendering the decision-making processes of Ottawa City Hall

    has, as its finality, a City of Ottawa that is inclusive of marginalized womens voices. The impact

    of the new subjectivities that CAWI is helping to shape can be nicely illustrated by a recent

    Awards ceremony of United Way Ottawa. The United Way had given a prize to CAWI-ITVF

    for its work with immigrant women. The Awards were given out at a banquet that brought

    together official Ottawa, including both business and political elites. There were three tables of

    CAWI-ITVF women at the banquet and the women were delighted to be there, delighted to be

    honoured and delighted to feel part of the Ottawa community. As always, the group splendidly

    and uniquely in that context, represented diversity, in terms of colour, size, age and dress. In

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    contrast to other awards received that evening, where the President or CEO alone represented the

    organization, thirty women from CAWI went to the stage together. Two women stepped forward

    as spokespeople and delivered, in eloquent English and French, a hard hitting message both of

    thanks for the award and a reminder of the barriers faced by marginalized women. At the end of

    the speeches, the thirty women threw their peach coloured scarves in the air, and shouted Our

    voices count: notre point de vue compte. It was the visualization of democracy, solidarity and

    diversity, women-centered and social justice seeking. At the same time it opposed the exclusion

    of immigrant women and put forward an alternate vision of politics as it should be. At this

    banquet, CAWI-ITVF women presented themselves not as supplicants grateful for recognition

    by the local elites, but as engaged citizen claimants who were signalling a new and assertive

    presence.

    (b) New Spatialities

    Although CAWI-ITVF does not have a public office at City Hall or anywhere else for

    that matteriii

    ; the claiming of space at City Hall has been a key strategy of CAWI-ITVF, not

    only to convince community women of the legitimacy of their claims but also to continually

    remind City Hall staff and politicians that their constituents include women from a broad range

    of backgrounds and perspectivesiv. Initial debates about whether meetings should be held at City

    Hall, have morphed from reticence because of community womens feelings of alienation, into

    an acknowledgement of their joint ownership of these spaces. As one member noted, being

    recognized by numerous staff and councillors and greeted with you here, again! was a sign of

    substantial progress. Only one year earlier, the same woman had spoken about how difficult it

    was to get anyone at City Hall to even acknowledge the concerns of her Latin American

    community.

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    Similarly, in the process of developing the first, city-wide Civic Participation Training

    initiative, a critical insight emerged. The training began as a way to empower women from

    marginalized communities to be able to assert their own communitys concerns at City Hall.

    Recruitment to the initiative was based on both individual characteristics and affiliation with a

    particular groups networks, in order to assure that each womans learning would be shared with

    her home community. Over time however, women also gained insights about their

    commonalities as women across other differences. Prior to CAWI-ITVF, these women had

    tended to regard the city through a lens that distinguished their particular community whether

    of feminist disability activists, or aboriginal women, or gay women, or women from a particular

    ethno-racial community -- from Others, where the focus was most particularly on powerful and

    distant decision-makers with whom they felt unable to communicate, and much less on other

    marginalized communities. Often these groups were both geographically and socially isolated.

    Being active in CAWI-ITVF has profoundly shifted the womens understandings of Ottawas

    socio-spatial landscapes. CAWI-ITVF has become a site of engagement and networking through

    which women from dramatically different places (geographically, culturally, ideologically)

    come together to share concerns and plan encounters for making issues known at City Hall

    However, CAWI-ITVF operates not only at the level of Ottawa; its activities are

    polymorphous in the manner discussed by Jessop et al (2008) and Mayer (2008) among others

    (see Figure 2). It has activities at the neighbourhood level, linked either through the community-

    based groups that CAWI-ITVF participants came from, or through the network of Community

    Resources and Health Centre. Through these links, CAWI-ITVF women are exposed to different

    forms of civic engagement (Andrew, 2009). Women do much of the work in their own

    communitys organizations, but the formal leadership tends to be male. These organizations

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    have often been the sites where women have begun to appreciate their own administrative and

    leadership capacities but also the barriers that stand in their way. CAWI-ITVF has aided these

    women to engage in scale jumping activities from neighbourhood to City, in order to take

    advantage of training and contestation in ways that are likely to provide them with useful tools

    and knowledge.

    As well as the scale jumping from City to neighbourhood, there also exists scalar

    interactions between Ottawa and the places of origin of CAWI-ITVF participants everywhere

    from Aboriginal communities elsewhere in Canada to the various countries of origin of

    immigrant women. The scale jumping to the global is a part of CAWI-ITVFs performance; it is

    a way of recognizing the assets of those who have come to Canada and of acknowledging the

    value of their cultures. It gives value to good practices from across the world and value to

    CAWI-ITVF for being able to access and contribute to these practices. Thus, the concrete spaces

    of CAWI-ITVF-IVTF cover territory (the Ottawa community, the diaspora communities), place

    (Ottawa City Hall and various meeting spaces throughout the City), scale (jumping from

    neighbourhood to city and from city to elsewhere and back again), and networks (links to diverse

    city-wide ethno-specific organizations; neighbourhood based Community Resource Centers;

    other equality seeking community organizations in Ottawa and beyond).

    PART 5: CONCLUDING THOUGHTS

    Admittedly, CAWI-ITVFs story is very much a product of circumstance, place and time.

    There is nothing automatic or natural or easy about the manner in which CAWI-ITVF has helped

    to shape the new subjectivities and new spatialities described above. CAWI-IVTF would not

    exist without the extremely skilful work of its coordinator and therefore without the senior

    government funding that has supported her efforts. These efforts include: work to identify

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    women from multiple backgrounds who might participate; work to bring diverse voices together

    in time and space for discussions about goals and approaches; work to create feelings of

    togetherness amid diversity; and work to construct both the content and the form of CAWI-

    ITVFs vocal and visual performances. Listening, discussing, debating, supporting, planning,

    anticipating and building womens confidence are all building blocks in constructing the

    alternative politics that reflects the concept of a politics of becoming in place. Voice and

    visibility have become central themes of the new subjectivities and new spatialities of CAWI-

    ITVF participants. They are the means by which attention has been garnered and political

    legitimacy granted to those who have traditionally not been seen or heard at City Hall. CAWI-

    ITVFs motto is: Our voices count notre point de vue compte. Voice is about process and

    about outcome and impact. The challenge is to keep the voices of the CAWI-ITVF participants

    authentic and true to their vision of life and politics and, at the same time, to be voices that the

    City is able to listen to and act upon. To contest one has to be listened to otherwise it is not

    contestation but only noise. The processes of decision-making in Ottawa City Hall, and generally

    across city halls in Canada, give considerable space to voice but only when this voice is

    organized and controlled by the City. The challenge is constant for CAWI-ITVF voice that is

    listened to. CAWI-ITVF participants articulate a holistic vision of life one uncomfortable with

    the segmenting of activities into containers that are only political or social or cultural. The City

    wants segmentation of voice you can speak to a specific clause of a specific motion, you are

    allowed so much time, you are on topic or you are not on topic. CAWI-ITVFs response has

    been to work with participants to create urban citizens that both engage with standard City Hall

    processes (albeit sometimes in refreshingly unusual ways) but also retain a right to contest

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    beyond these approaches and to do so in a feminist register, should the decisions be contrary to

    their understandings of what would be just.

    At the same time that CAWI-ITVFs story is specific and particular, it also offers

    valuable insights for other critical, engaged scholars with an interest in local politics. One such

    insight is that the possible subjects and spaces of contentious politics are more diverse and

    diffuse than might appear at first glance. Subjects are not only those who are ready to engage in

    local politics should funds and organizers become available. They also are unlikely actors whose

    perceived liabilities might become resources when the focus is on processes of engagement.

    Moreover, neglect of such capacities are potentially significant. A second insight is more

    particularly about contentious politics in a feminist register. The feminism that we understand as

    informing the efforts of Gibson-Graham (2006) and Harcourt and Escobar (2005) is also alive

    and well within the confines of neoliberalizing cities such as Ottawa. In these places, the lines

    between community organizations and state institutions are very fuzzy and are probably

    becoming are more so. Working in a feminist register in such circumstances means having

    patience in the way that Appadurai (2006) described this tactic and its connections to slow

    learning in relation to the Mumbai Alliance. It means that there is a tight rope to be walked,

    between the need to constantly be nurturing and checking back with ones base at the same

    time as one tries to cultivate opportunities for progressive changes within formal state

    institutions at a variety of scales. Obviously, the potential pitfalls of such a strategy are

    numerous. Simultaneously though, we know far too little about the potential impacts of a greater

    capacity to carry forward collective claims for inclusion and equality.

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    iCorrespondence concerning this article should be addressed to Fran Klodawsky, Department of

    Geography and Environmental Studies, Carleton University, 1125 Colonel By Drive, Ottawa,

    Ontario, Canada, K1S 5B6; telephone: 613-520-2600, e. 8689; fax: 613-520-4301; e-mail:[email protected].

    iiIn 2006, the mayoral race was won with the slogan zero means zero referring to a promise not

    to raise taxes. In 2008, City Council approved a motion to increase taxes by 4.9%, a rate increase

    that meant there would be a significant budget shortfall.

    iiiWhile there have been numerous discussions about the pros and cons of setting up an official

    office, until now CAWI-ITVFs physical location has been the homes of its staff (with

    appropriate compensation and provisions for separating home and work activities).

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    iv

    Since 2004, active CAWI-ITVF members have included activists from the aboriginal,

    disability and francophone communities, university students and professors, as well as

    newcomers from Bangladesh, Ethiopia, Iraq, Peru, Rwanda, Somalia and Venezuela.