Introduction: Grammars of Urban Injustice
暂无分享,去创建一个
[1] L. Lees. The urban injustices of New Labour’s ‘new urban renewal’: the case of the Aylesbury Estate in London , 2014 .
[2] P. Cloke,et al. Modes of Attentiveness: Reading for Difference in Geographies of Homelessness , 2014 .
[3] G. DeVerteuil. Does the Punitive Need the Supportive? A Sympathetic Critique of Current Grammars of Urban Injustice , 2014 .
[4] Kurt Iveson. Building a City For “The People”: The Politics of Alliance‐Building in the Sydney Green Ban Movement , 2014 .
[5] Tom Slater,et al. The Myth of “Broken Britain”: Welfare Reform and the Production of Ignorance , 2014 .
[6] J. Uitermark,et al. From Politicization to Policing: The Rise and Decline of New Social Movements in Amsterdam and Paris , 2014 .
[7] Jonathan Darling. Asylum and the post-political: domopolitics, depoliticisation and acts of citizenship , 2014 .
[8] T. Slater. Expulsions from public housing: The hidden context of concentrated affluence , 2013 .
[9] P. Cloke,et al. Geographies of postsecular rapprochement in the city1 , 2013 .
[10] Martin J. Murray,et al. The Quandary of Post-Public Space: New Urbanism, Melrose Arch and the Rebuilding of Johannesburg after Apartheid , 2013 .
[11] D. A. Ghertner,et al. Nuisance Talk and the Propriety of Property: Middle Class Discourses of a Slum‐Free Delhi , 2012 .
[12] R. Fincher,et al. Justice and Injustice in the City , 2012 .
[13] A. Merrifield. The politics of the encounter and the urbanization of the world , 2012 .
[14] Gordon MacLeod,et al. Stretching Urban Renaissance: Privatizing Space, Civilizing Place, Summoning ‘Community’ , 2012 .
[15] E. Swyngedouw. Interrogating post-democratization: Reclaiming egalitarian political spaces , 2011 .
[16] Kurt Iveson. Social or spatial justice? Marcuse and Soja on the right to the city , 2011 .
[17] C. Barnett. Geography and ethics: Justice unbound , 2011 .
[18] N. Brenner,et al. Postneoliberalism and its Malcontents , 2012 .
[19] G. DeVerteuil,et al. Complexity not collapse: recasting the geographies of homelessness in a ‘punitive’ age , 2009 .
[20] V. Watson. 'The planned city sweeps the poor away ... ' § : Urban planning and 21st century urbanisation , 2009 .
[21] P. Watt,et al. Housing Stock Transfers, Regeneration and State-Led Gentrification in London , 2009 .
[22] E. Swyngedouw. The Antinomies of the Postpolitical City: In Search of a Democratic Politics of Environmental Production , 2009 .
[23] N. Brenner,et al. Cities for people, not for profit , 2009 .
[24] P. Marcuse. From critical urban theory to the right to the city , 2009 .
[25] R. Keil. The urban politics of roll‐with‐it neoliberalization , 2009 .
[26] J. Uitermark. An in memoriam for the just city of Amsterdam , 2009 .
[27] Stacey Murphy. “Compassionate” Strategies of Managing Homelessness: Post-Revanchist Geographies in San Francisco , 2009 .
[28] R. Atkinson. The Great Cut: The Support for Private Modes of Social Evasion by Public Policy , 2008 .
[29] J. Uitermark,et al. Civilising the City: Populism and Revanchist Urbanism in Rotterdam , 2008 .
[30] Colin Mcfarlane. Governing the Contaminated City: Infrastructure and Sanitation in Colonial and Post-Colonial Bombay , 2008 .
[31] Loïc Wacquant. Territorial Stigmatization in the Age of Advanced Marginality , 2007 .
[32] Kate Swanson. Revanchist Urbanism Heads South: The Regulation of Indigenous Beggars and Street Vendors in Ecuador , 2007 .
[33] Tom Slater,et al. The Eviction of Critical Perspectives from Gentrification Research , 2006 .
[34] S. Herbert,et al. Conceptions of Space and Crime in the Punitive Neoliberal City , 2006 .
[35] G. DeVerteuil. The local state and homeless shelters: Beyond revanchism? , 2006 .
[36] Mustafa Dikeç. Two Decades of French Urban Policy: From Social Development of Neighbourhoods to the Republican Penal State , 2006 .
[37] D. Judd. Everything is Always Going to Hell , 2005 .
[38] David Wilson. Toward A Contingent Urban Neoliberalism , 2004 .
[39] C. Péchu. Du Comité des Mal logés à Droit au logement, sociologie d'une mobilisation : les transformations contemporaines de l'action collective , 2004 .
[40] A. Baviskar. Between violence and desire: space, power, and identity in the making of metropolitan Delhi , 2003 .
[41] G. Macleod. From Urban Entrepreneurialism to a “Revanchist City”? On the Spatial Injustices of Glasgow’s Renaissance , 2002 .
[42] R. Keil. “Common–Sense” Neoliberalism: Progressive Conservative Urbanism in Toronto, Canada , 2002 .
[43] Steven Flusty,et al. The Banality of Interdiction: Surveillance, Control and the Displacement of Diversity , 2001 .
[44] M. Moore,et al. Enabling Environments: Do Anti-Poverty Programmes Mobilise the Poor? , 2000 .
[45] A. Merrifield. The Dialectics of Dystopia: Disorder and Zero Tolerance in The City , 2000 .
[46] N. Smith. Giuliani Time: The Revanchist 1990s , 1998 .
[47] David Harvey,et al. Social Justice, Postmodernism and the City* , 1992 .