New issue of Antipode, with a theme section organised by two of my old Durham colleagues, and including a paper by a colleague from my early days at Durham.
Here it is, Antipode 46(4), and it’s a good ‘un…
The first six papers form a superb symposium; organised by Durham University’s Gordon MacLeod and Colin McFarlane, ‘Grammars of Urban Injustice‘ includes:
Does the Punitive Need the Supportive? A Sympathetic Critique of Current Grammars of Urban Injustice by Geoff DeVerteuil;
Modes of Attentiveness: Reading for Difference in Geographies of Homelessness by Jon May and Paul Cloke;
The Urban Injustices of New Labour’s “New Urban Renewal”: The Case of the Aylesbury Estate in London by Loretta Lees;
The Myth of “Broken Britain”: Welfare Reform and the Production of Ignorance by Tom Slater;
From Politicization to Policing: The Rise and Decline of New Social Movements in Amsterdam and Paris by Justus Uitermark and Walter Nicholls; and
Building a City For “The People”: The Politics of Alliance-Building in the Sydney Green Ban Movement by Kurt Iveson.
The next six contribute to…
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