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Marginal Spaces - Ser Volume 5 (Paperback, New)
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Marginal Spaces - Ser Volume 5 (Paperback, New)
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The literature on modernist and postmodernist urban development is
abundant, yet few researchers have taken up the challenge of
studying the areas hi which marginalized people live as sources of
resistance to continued modernization. In Marginal Spaces, Michael
Smith has assembled case studies combining structural and
historical analyses of the moves of powerful social interests to
dominate social space, and the tactics and strategies various
marginalized social groups employ to reclaim dominated space for
their own use. The marginal spaces embodied in the title of this
fifth volume of the Comparative Urban and Community Research series
include five sites of domination and resistance. A squatters'
movement in Ann Arbor, Michigan, resists the adverse consequences
of four decades of urban development. A homeless encampment in
Chicago engages hi "guerilla architecture" and other moves designed
to reconstitute prevailing social constructions of the problem of
"homelessness." An antigentrification movement hi the East Village
of New York engages hi an ongoing struggle to resist efforts by
developers to market their neighborhood as space for luxury
condominium development. There is a Public Housing Council
organized by African American women hi New Orleans that is
resisting both the material regulation of their daily lives and the
dominant social construction of public housing as a racially
gendered space suitable only for "dependent" women and children of
color. Finally, there is a subordinate labor market niche hi
California agriculture where indigenous Mixtec peasants from Oaxaca
are displacing the more traditional mestizo farm workers, but who
are also politically organizing as a transnational grassroots
movement, pursuing a binational strategy to alleviate then-
economic, political, and cultural marginality. Contributions and
contributors include: "House People, Not Cars!" by Corey Dolgon,
Michael Kline, and Laura Dresser; "Tranquillity City" by Tahnadge
Wright; "Private Redevelopment and the Changing Forms of
Displacement hi the East Village of New York" by Christopher Mele;
"Resisting Racially Gendered Space" by Alma Young and Jyaphia
Christos-Rodgers; and "Mixtecs and Mestizos hi California
Agriculture" by Carol Zabin. This volume will be of interest to
urban planners, sociologists, and political scientists, especially
those with strong interests hi local ethnography and concrete
policy.
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