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Planning and Diversity in the City - Redistribution, Recognition and Encounter (Hardcover, New and REV and): Ruth Fincher, Kurt... Planning and Diversity in the City - Redistribution, Recognition and Encounter (Hardcover, New and REV and)
Ruth Fincher, Kurt Iveson
R4,583 Discovery Miles 45 830 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

Planning theory and practice has become more conscious in recent times of the need to cater for a diverse range of needs and preferences. But there has been less clarity about what goals and objectives should inform planning for such diversity. In this important new book Ruth Fincher and Kurt Iveson identify three distinct working principles of planning for diversity: redistribution, recognition and encounter. Each principle is the subject of a pair of chapters. The first explaining the principle and the second showcasing and comparing efforts to shape cities according to it, drawing on relevant examples from around the world. Planning for Diversity is the ideal introduction to the issues that surround diversity and planning and provides a stimulating new line of advance for reducing inequality and working towards 'just diversity' in cities. RUTH FINCHER is Professor of Geography at the University of Melbourne, Australia KURT IVESON is Lecturer in Urban Geography at the University of Sydney, Australia

Creating Unequal Futures? - Rethinking Poverty, Inequality and Disadvantage (Hardcover): Ruth Fincher Creating Unequal Futures? - Rethinking Poverty, Inequality and Disadvantage (Hardcover)
Ruth Fincher
R3,893 Discovery Miles 38 930 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

'This is an important and powerful book because of the rigour of the analysis, the good sense of the innovative strategies for action by government, business and civil society, and the concern throughout for social justice.' - John Langmore, Director, UN Division for Social Policy and Development One in six Australian kids live below the poverty line. Among the twenty-five leading industrialised countries, Australia has the fifth highest child poverty rate. This is a useful, if stark, indicator of the extent of long-term disadvantage in this country. Creating Unequal Futures? brings together eight of Australia's leading social scientists to introduce the reader to the processes which create and sustain persistent patterns of poverty and disadvantage. Although the contributors use different approaches, their research leads to a united call for a rethinking away from the prevailing 'gloom and doom' presentations of Australian material life. They signal pathways out of the dilemmas that bind people to poverty and disadvantage. If followed, those pathways will guide us to a future characterised by less inequality. If ignored, we may further entrench patterns of disadvantage and risk creating unequal futures for all Australians.

Everyday Equalities - Making Multicultures in Settler Colonial Cities (Hardcover, 1): Ruth Fincher, Kurt Iveson, Helga Leitner,... Everyday Equalities - Making Multicultures in Settler Colonial Cities (Hardcover, 1)
Ruth Fincher, Kurt Iveson, Helga Leitner, Valerie Preston
R2,678 R2,220 Discovery Miles 22 200 Save R458 (17%) Ships in 12 - 17 working days

A timely new look at coexisting without assimilating in multicultural cities If city life is a “being together of strangers,” what forms of being together should we strive for in cities with ethnic and racial diversity? Everyday Equalities seeks evidence of progressive political alternatives to racialized inequality that are emerging from everyday encounters in Los Angeles, Melbourne, Sydney, and Toronto—settler colonial cities that, established through efforts to dispossess and eliminate indigenous societies, have been destinations for waves of immigrants from across the globe ever since.  Everyday Equalities finds such alternatives being developed as people encounter one another in the process of making a home, earning a living, moving around the city, and forming collective actions or communities. Here four leading scholars in critical urban geography come together to deliver a powerful and cohesive message about the meaning of equality in contemporary cities. Drawing on both theoretical reflection and urban ethnographic research, they offer the formulation “being together in difference as equals” as a normative frame to reimagine the meaning and pursuit of equality in today’s urban multicultures.  As the examples in Everyday Equalities indicate, much emotional labor, combined with a willingness to learn from each other, negotiate across differences, and agitate for change goes into constructing environments that foster being together in difference as equals. Importantly, the authors argue, a commitment to equality is not only a hope for a future city but also a way of being together in the present.

Everyday Equalities - Making Multicultures in Settler Colonial Cities (Paperback, 1): Ruth Fincher, Kurt Iveson, Helga Leitner,... Everyday Equalities - Making Multicultures in Settler Colonial Cities (Paperback, 1)
Ruth Fincher, Kurt Iveson, Helga Leitner, Valerie Preston
R706 R609 Discovery Miles 6 090 Save R97 (14%) Ships in 12 - 17 working days

A timely new look at coexisting without assimilating in multicultural cities If city life is a "being together of strangers," what forms of being together should we strive for in cities with ethnic and racial diversity? Everyday Equalities seeks evidence of progressive political alternatives to racialized inequality that are emerging from everyday encounters in Los Angeles, Melbourne, Sydney, and Toronto-settler colonial cities that, established through efforts to dispossess and eliminate indigenous societies, have been destinations for waves of immigrants from across the globe ever since. Everyday Equalities finds such alternatives being developed as people encounter one another in the process of making a home, earning a living, moving around the city, and forming collective actions or communities. Here four leading scholars in critical urban geography come together to deliver a powerful and cohesive message about the meaning of equality in contemporary cities. Drawing on both theoretical reflection and urban ethnographic research, they offer the formulation "being together in difference as equals" as a normative frame to reimagine the meaning and pursuit of equality in today's urban multicultures. As the examples in Everyday Equalities indicate, much emotional labor, combined with a willingness to learn from each other, negotiate across differences, and agitate for change goes into constructing environments that foster being together in difference as equals. Importantly, the authors argue, a commitment to equality is not only a hope for a future city but also a way of being together in the present.

Manifesto for Living in the Anthropocene (Paperback): Deborah Bird Rose, Ruth Fincher Manifesto for Living in the Anthropocene (Paperback)
Deborah Bird Rose, Ruth Fincher; Katherine Gibson
R503 Discovery Miles 5 030 Ships in 10 - 15 working days
Cities of Difference (Paperback): Ruth Fincher, Jane M. Jacobs Cities of Difference (Paperback)
Ruth Fincher, Jane M. Jacobs
R1,222 Discovery Miles 12 220 Ships in 10 - 15 working days

How can contemporary theories of difference enhance our understanding of traditional urban studies concerns such as housing, labor markets, and structures of state entitlement? What are the connections between urban space and identity politics? This provocative text provides fresh perspectives on the fragmented city within a cultural political economy framework. Contributors explore the role of race, ethnicity, class, gender and sexuality, able-bodiedness, and other axes of difference in the geography of postmodern cities. Using a range of cutting-edge theoretical and methodological approaches, the book probes the relationship of the broader realities of urban life--economic polarization, gentrification, and the proliferation of sites of consumption to the everyday life and political power of different communities.

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