Urban Informality: Transnational Perspectives from the Middle East, Latin America, and South AsiaAnanya Roy, Nezar AlSayyad The turn of the century has been a moment of rapid urbanization. Much of this urban growth is taking place in the cities of the developing world and much of it in informal settlements. This book presents cutting-edge research from various world regions to demonstrate these trends. The contributions reveal that informal housing is no longer the domain of the urban poor; rather it is a significant zone of transactions for the middle-class and even transnational elites. Indeed, the book presents a rich view of "urban informality" as a system of regulations and norms that governs the use of space and makes possible new forms of social and political power. The book is organized as a "transnational" endeavor. It brings together three regional domains of research--the Middle East, Latin America, and South Asia--that are rarely in conversation with one another. It also unsettles the hierarchy of development and underdevelopment by looking at some First World processes of informality through a Third World research lens. |
Contents
Urban Informality as a New Way of Life | 7 |
LIBERALIZATION GLOBALIZATION AND URBAN INFORMALITY | 31 |
Love in the Time of Enhanced Capital Flows Reflections on the Links between Liberalization and Informality | 33 |
The Changing Nature of the Informal Sector in Karachi due to Global Restructuring and Liberalization and Its Repercussions | 67 |
Globalization and the Politics of the Informals in the Global South | 79 |
THE POLITICS OF URBAN INFORMALITIES | 103 |
Marginality From Myth to Reality in the Favelas of Rio de Janeiro 19692002 | 105 |
The Gentlemans City Urban Informality in the Calcutta of New Communism | 147 |
Control Resistance and Informality Urban Ethnocracy in BeerSheva Israel | 209 |
TRANSNATIONAL INTERROGATION | 241 |
Informality of Housing Production at the Urban Rural Interface The Not So Strange Case of the Texas Colonias | 243 |
Power Property and Poverty Why De Sotos Mystery of Capital Cannot Be Solved | 271 |
Transnational Trespassings The Geopolitics of Urban Informality | 289 |
SELECTED BIBLIOGRAPHY | 319 |
323 | |
CONTRIBUTORS | 337 |
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Common terms and phrases
activities agricultural land AlSayyad American Ananya Roy Arab Bayat Bedouin Beer-Sheva Cairo and Alexandria Calcutta Castells colonias context countries created culture Djanira economic Egypt emerged employment ethnic ethnocracy ethnocratic exformal favelas Figure formal global Greater Cairo groups Haganah Hernando De Soto illegal informal areas informal housing informal sector informal settlements informal-sector International Israel Jewish Karachi labor Latin America liberalization lives ment Mexico Middle East mobility municipal Mystery of Capital Myth of Marginality Negev neoliberal Operation Sunshine organizations ownership percent planning political population poverty production quiet encroachment regime region residents resistance Rio de Janeiro role self-help slum social Soto Soto's space spatial squatter settlement strategy street structural subdivisions Texas Colonias Third World tion transnational University Press urban informality urban poor West Bengal workers York