The rapid process of urbanization currently swelling the poor urban neighborhoods of developing countries is changing local and national political landscapes. As the population of urban poor continues to grow—it is expected that by 2030 half of the total urban population will be poor—so are poor peoples' demands for access to public services, as well as the type and intensity of their engagements with political actors. The dissertation focuses on the different types of interactions between the urban poor and politicians and specifically tackles the following questions: What explains the variation in political participation among the urban poor? What drives the urban poor to become active in politics? What types of political activity are the...
Despite the broad celebration of Brazil’s urban reform movement, recent events in Brazil have called...
This article analyses the effects of slum upgrading on the lives of slum dwellers, especially on the...
Are slum dwellers more involved in clientelistic arrangements than other (urban poor) voters? While ...
Although exploring the political participation of the poor is of paramount significance in the curre...
This dissertation uses popular discourses of daily life, social relationships and politics to examin...
Political and economic reforms carried out during the 1990's in Mexico (as throughout Latin America)...
Seeing urban politics from the perspective of those who reside in slums offers an important dimensio...
This dissertation combines ethnography and history to study the co-evolution of participatory govern...
As the world approaches the point in which urban poverty is to become the primary characteristic of ...
In Brazil, inequality, segregation, and urban violence go hand in hand. Not surprisingly, Fortaleza,...
Recent research has stressed the role of political institutions in economic development. This thesis...
Does electoral democracy improve public goods provision for the poor? This paper considers whether a...
This article focuses on the changing nature of state-society interactions in the state of Bahia, Bra...
In a context where personal relations play a central role in structuring political life, to what ext...
This article envisages slum dwellers' politics in Recife, Brazil as a realm of possibility in which ...
Despite the broad celebration of Brazil’s urban reform movement, recent events in Brazil have called...
This article analyses the effects of slum upgrading on the lives of slum dwellers, especially on the...
Are slum dwellers more involved in clientelistic arrangements than other (urban poor) voters? While ...
Although exploring the political participation of the poor is of paramount significance in the curre...
This dissertation uses popular discourses of daily life, social relationships and politics to examin...
Political and economic reforms carried out during the 1990's in Mexico (as throughout Latin America)...
Seeing urban politics from the perspective of those who reside in slums offers an important dimensio...
This dissertation combines ethnography and history to study the co-evolution of participatory govern...
As the world approaches the point in which urban poverty is to become the primary characteristic of ...
In Brazil, inequality, segregation, and urban violence go hand in hand. Not surprisingly, Fortaleza,...
Recent research has stressed the role of political institutions in economic development. This thesis...
Does electoral democracy improve public goods provision for the poor? This paper considers whether a...
This article focuses on the changing nature of state-society interactions in the state of Bahia, Bra...
In a context where personal relations play a central role in structuring political life, to what ext...
This article envisages slum dwellers' politics in Recife, Brazil as a realm of possibility in which ...
Despite the broad celebration of Brazil’s urban reform movement, recent events in Brazil have called...
This article analyses the effects of slum upgrading on the lives of slum dwellers, especially on the...
Are slum dwellers more involved in clientelistic arrangements than other (urban poor) voters? While ...