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Shadow cities : a billion squatters, a new urban world / Robert Neuwirth.

By: Material type: TextTextPublisher: New York : Routledge, 2005Description: vii, 335 pages : illustrations ; 24 cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 0415933196
  • 9780415933193
  • 0415953618
  • 9780415953610
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 307.336 22
LOC classification:
  • HD7287.95 .N48 2005
Contents:
Prologue : crossing the tin roof boundary line -- 1. Rio de Janeiro : city without titles -- 2. Nairobi : the squatter control -- 3. Mumbai : squatter class structure -- 4. Istanbul : the promise of squatter self-government -- 5. The 21st century medieval city -- 6. Squatters in New York -- 7. The habitat fantasy -- 8. Are squatters criminals? -- 9. Proper squatters, improper property -- 10. The cities of tomorrow.
Review: "This is a book that confronts one of the least known but most important facts about the world's cities: that they are home to more than a billion squatters. Within a generation, that number is projected to grow to two billion - and more than half the people living in cities will be squatters. Yet most outsiders are unwilling to step into their communities, fearing crime, disease, and distress." "Investigative reporter Robert Neuwirth spent two years living in squatter neighborhoods on four continents. In Shadow Cities, he reports what he has learned from squatters in Rio de Janeiro, Istanbul, Mumbai, and Nairobi. He started his journey prepared to find squatters as signifiers of urban decay and lawlessness. Instead, he found vital communities of industrious and highly moral people who have built communities of lasting power." "Shadow Cities dispels the myth that shantytowns are purely a third world phenomenon, showing that the great cities of Europe and North America were once dominated by shantytowns. And Neuwirth shows that squatters will build vital neighborhoods without private titles as long as they know they are not subject to eviction." "Shadow Cities acknowledges that the world of the squatters may be gritty, but it shows that it is governed by hope. Squatters, Neuwirth argues are building the cities of tomorrow."--BOOK JACKET.
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Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Copy number Status Date due Barcode
Book City Campus City Campus Main Collection 307.336 NEU (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Available A262224B
Book City Campus City Campus Main Collection 307.336 NEU (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Available A430844B

1st paperback ed. published 2006.

Includes bibliographical references (pages 321-328) and index.

Prologue : crossing the tin roof boundary line -- 1. Rio de Janeiro : city without titles -- 2. Nairobi : the squatter control -- 3. Mumbai : squatter class structure -- 4. Istanbul : the promise of squatter self-government -- 5. The 21st century medieval city -- 6. Squatters in New York -- 7. The habitat fantasy -- 8. Are squatters criminals? -- 9. Proper squatters, improper property -- 10. The cities of tomorrow.

"This is a book that confronts one of the least known but most important facts about the world's cities: that they are home to more than a billion squatters. Within a generation, that number is projected to grow to two billion - and more than half the people living in cities will be squatters. Yet most outsiders are unwilling to step into their communities, fearing crime, disease, and distress." "Investigative reporter Robert Neuwirth spent two years living in squatter neighborhoods on four continents. In Shadow Cities, he reports what he has learned from squatters in Rio de Janeiro, Istanbul, Mumbai, and Nairobi. He started his journey prepared to find squatters as signifiers of urban decay and lawlessness. Instead, he found vital communities of industrious and highly moral people who have built communities of lasting power." "Shadow Cities dispels the myth that shantytowns are purely a third world phenomenon, showing that the great cities of Europe and North America were once dominated by shantytowns. And Neuwirth shows that squatters will build vital neighborhoods without private titles as long as they know they are not subject to eviction." "Shadow Cities acknowledges that the world of the squatters may be gritty, but it shows that it is governed by hope. Squatters, Neuwirth argues are building the cities of tomorrow."--BOOK JACKET.

Machine converted from AACR2 source record.

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