Editors |
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Contributors |
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Introduction: `Urban' ideas for two centuries |
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1 | (20) |
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PART 1 Globalised neoliberal urbanism: Hegemony and opposition |
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21 | (88) |
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1 Lefebvre's transduction in a neoliberal epoch |
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25 | (15) |
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2 Lefebvre in Palestine: Anti-colonial de-colonisation and the right to the city |
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40 | (10) |
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3 The urban revolution(s) in Latin America: Reinventing Utopia |
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50 | (9) |
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4 Contesting spaces of an urban renewal project: A study of Kumartuli's artist colony |
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59 | (10) |
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5 Lefebvre and contemporary urban ism: The enduring influence and critical power of his writing on cities |
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69 | (9) |
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6 Neo-liberalism, extraction and displacement: Abstract space and urbanism in India's `tribal' belt |
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78 | (10) |
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7 Constructed otherness: Remaking space in American suburbia |
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88 | (11) |
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8 Prohibited places: The pericentral self-produced neighbourhoods of Maputo in the neoliberal context |
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99 | (10) |
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PART 2 Rethinking the spatial triad and rhythmanalysis |
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109 | (84) |
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9 Still burning: The politics of language in the South Bronx |
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113 | (11) |
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10 Spaces of resistance in Luanda: `How do [ small] gains become prisons?' an analysis from a Lefebvrian perspective |
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124 | (10) |
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11 Reading and applying Lefebvre as an urban social anthropologist |
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134 | (10) |
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12 Towards a contemporary concrete abstract |
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144 | (9) |
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13 Russian dolls: Trialectics in motion and spatial analysis |
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153 | (11) |
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14 Counter-spaces, no-man's lands and mainstream public space: Representational spaces in homeless activism in Japan |
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164 | (9) |
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15 Henri Lefebvre's rhythmanalysis as a form of urban poetics |
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173 | (10) |
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16 Space in representation: Dislocation of meaning from the Gezi Park protests to the new Turkish Presidential Compound |
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183 | (10) |
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PART 3 Representing and contesting urban space |
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193 | (88) |
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17 Lefebvre and the law: Social justice, the spatial imaginary and new technologies |
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197 | (10) |
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18 Interpreting the spatial triad: A now analytical model between form and flux, space and time |
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207 | (14) |
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19 Movement without words: An intersection of Lefebvre and the urban practice of skateboarding |
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221 | (9) |
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20 Visual productions of urban space: Lefebvre, the city and cinema |
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230 | (10) |
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21 Dominated and appropriated knowledge workspaces: A tale of two cases |
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240 | (10) |
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22 Dwelling on design: The influence of Logos and Eros, nouns and verbs, on public housing renewal and cooperative alternatives |
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250 | (10) |
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23 The consequential geographies of the immigrant neighbourhood of Quinta do Mocho in the Lisbon Metropolitan Area |
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260 | (11) |
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24 Contested cultural heritage space in urban renewal: The case of a dense urban city in Hong Kong |
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271 | (10) |
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PART 4 Planetary urbanisation and `nature' |
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281 | (86) |
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25 Urban agriculture: Food as production of space |
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287 | (11) |
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26 Ecologising Lefebvre: Urban mobilities and the production of nature |
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298 | (11) |
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27 Lefebvre and atmospheric production: An architectronics of air |
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309 | (9) |
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28 Transforming nature through cyclical appropriation or linear dominance?: Lefebvre's contributions to thinking about the interaction between human activity and nature |
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318 | (9) |
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29 Drivers of global urbanisation: Exploring the emerging urban society |
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327 | (9) |
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30 The aesthetics of spatial justice under planetary urbanisation |
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336 | (10) |
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31 Mapping Lefebvre's theory on the production of space to an integrated approach for sustainable urbanism |
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346 | (9) |
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32 Land use planning, global changes and local responsibilities |
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355 | (12) |
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PART 5 Rethinking the right to the city |
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367 | (86) |
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33 Right to the city or to the planet?: "Why Henri Lefebvre's vision is useful and too narrow at the same time |
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371 | (11) |
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34 `In a group you feel OK, but outside there you are ready to die': The role of a support group in disabled refugees' struggles for their `right to the city' in Kampala, Uganda |
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382 | (10) |
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35 `Right to the city' versus neoliberal urbanism in globalising cities in China |
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392 | (10) |
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36 Urban creativity through displacement and spatial disruption |
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402 | (9) |
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37 The `newcomers" right to the city: Producing common spaces in Athens and Thessaloniki |
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411 | (11) |
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38 The right to the city: Evaluating the changing role of community participation in urban planning in England |
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422 | (10) |
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39 Lefebvre and the inequity of obesity. Slim chance of food justice for the urban poor |
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432 | (9) |
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40 The urban and the written in Lefebvre s urban texts |
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441 | (12) |
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PART 6 Right to the city, differential space and urban Utopias |
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453 | (80) |
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41 Exploring the contours of the right to the city: Abstraction, appropriation and Utopia |
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457 | (10) |
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42 Informal settlements and shantytowns as differential space |
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467 | (10) |
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43 From Mourenx to spaces of difference |
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477 | (15) |
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44 Right to the city and urban resistance in Turkey: A comparative perspective |
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492 | (10) |
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45 Dystopian Utopia? Utopian dystopia? A tale of two struggles for the right to the city |
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502 | (10) |
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46 `Something more, something better, something else, is needed': A renewed `fete' on London's South Bank |
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512 | (10) |
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47 The right to the city: Centre or periphery? |
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522 | (11) |
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Conclusions: The future-possible |
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533 | (16) |
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Index |
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