Is the Right to the City (RTTC) still a useful framework for a transformative urban politics? Given recent scholarly criticism of its real-world applications and appropriations, in this paper, we argue that the transformative promise in the RTTC lies beyond its role as a framework for oppositional struggle, and in its normative ends. Building upon Henri Lefebvre's original writing on the subject, we develop a “radical-cooperative” conception of the RTTC. Such a view, which is grounded in the lived experiences of the current city, envisions an urban society in which inhabitants can pursue their material and social needs through self-governed cooperation across social difference. Growing and diversifying spaces and sectors of urban life that ...
The right to the city has lately become the rallying cry for many urban social movements all over th...
Social justice movements organize against contemporary conditions of oppression and domination. Toda...
In recent years responses to neoliberal urbanism and social injustice have been framed in terms of “...
Is the Right to the City (RTTC) still a useful framework for a transformative urban politics? Given ...
The right to the city concept has recently attracted a great deal of attention from radical theorist...
Book of proceedings: Annual AESOP Congress, Spaces of Dialog for Places of Dignity, Lisbon, 11-14th ...
The right to the city, defined by Henri Lefebvre in 1967 as the right of urban inhabitants to build,...
This contribution is about one issue, namely why there is a new and compelling claim to ‘ the right ...
International audienceFor over two decades, various urban social movements have been growing in a nu...
Henri Lefebvre’ s urgent utopia of right to the city to achieve a new form of urban governance that ...
A. Lefebvre a French intellectual, neo-marxist progenitor of the idea of right to the city understan...
The paper discusses the political usefulness and the challenges met by the right to the city concept...
In this paper I propose to conceive the right to the city as a right to have rights. With this expre...
In 1967, Henri Lefebvre developed the Right to the City (RTC) as ‘a cry and demand’ for ‘a transform...
This article is aimed at expanding the reader’s knowledge of urban issues, especially the concept of...
The right to the city has lately become the rallying cry for many urban social movements all over th...
Social justice movements organize against contemporary conditions of oppression and domination. Toda...
In recent years responses to neoliberal urbanism and social injustice have been framed in terms of “...
Is the Right to the City (RTTC) still a useful framework for a transformative urban politics? Given ...
The right to the city concept has recently attracted a great deal of attention from radical theorist...
Book of proceedings: Annual AESOP Congress, Spaces of Dialog for Places of Dignity, Lisbon, 11-14th ...
The right to the city, defined by Henri Lefebvre in 1967 as the right of urban inhabitants to build,...
This contribution is about one issue, namely why there is a new and compelling claim to ‘ the right ...
International audienceFor over two decades, various urban social movements have been growing in a nu...
Henri Lefebvre’ s urgent utopia of right to the city to achieve a new form of urban governance that ...
A. Lefebvre a French intellectual, neo-marxist progenitor of the idea of right to the city understan...
The paper discusses the political usefulness and the challenges met by the right to the city concept...
In this paper I propose to conceive the right to the city as a right to have rights. With this expre...
In 1967, Henri Lefebvre developed the Right to the City (RTC) as ‘a cry and demand’ for ‘a transform...
This article is aimed at expanding the reader’s knowledge of urban issues, especially the concept of...
The right to the city has lately become the rallying cry for many urban social movements all over th...
Social justice movements organize against contemporary conditions of oppression and domination. Toda...
In recent years responses to neoliberal urbanism and social injustice have been framed in terms of “...