Cities under siege: September 11th and after. City (Vol. 5, No. 3)
New York, September 11, 11 septembre, 9/11, urbicide, catastrophe, terrorism, terrorisme, sécurité, Catterall Bob
<div><b>Extract from the section introduction by Bob Catterall:</b></div> </div> The image of a siege suggested itself as we first began on the 13th of September to explore with others the meanings of the attacks, and their implications for policy and action, on New York and Washington on the 11th...</div> </div> The inquiry started in Newcastle-upon-Tyne in England and is being edited in San Francisco in late November. The bulk of the contributions were written for this issue and are from Canada, Greece and Mexico as well as the US and Britain. We have also included immediate responses in the form of a sermon from Newcastle and Mike Davis' contribution to a US teach-in. Eric Darton's strangely prescient discussion of his 1999 book on the World Trade Center preceded September 11th. We end this feature with Haleh Afshar's thoughts about the nature of Islamic fundamentalism, or, rather, renewal and return.</div> </div> <b>Section contents:</b></div> </div> Bob Catterall - Cities under siege: September 11th and after: Introduction</div> Nicholas Coulton - 'Wiser than the calculations of rulers...'</div> Mike Davis - The future of fear</div> John Rennie Short - New York, September 11</div> John Friedmann - Cities under siege?</div> Mark Gottdiener - Thoughts on Tuesday's events</div> Peter Marcuse - Reflections on the events: Urban life will change</div> Eduardo Mendieta - The space of terror, the utopian city: On the attack on the World Trade Center</div> Lila Leontidou - Attack on the landscape of power: An anti-war elegy to New York inspired by Whitman's verses</div> Stephen Graham - In a moment: On glocal mobilities and the terrorised city</div> Michael Safier - Confronting "urbicide": Crimes against humaniaty, civility and diversity and the case for a civic cosmopolitan response to the attack on New York</div> Divided we stand: A conversation with Eric Darton</div> Gustavo Esteva - Embracing the otherness of the other</div> Haleh Afshar - Terrorism and the Middle East</div> </div>
NC
Routledge
2001
383-438
Revue
http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/ccit20/5/3
City : Analysis of urban trends, culture, theory, policy, action (Vol. 14, No. 6)
Soja Edward, Seeking spatial justice, spatial justice, justice spatiale, injustice, inégalité spatiale, espace urbain, Roma, Roms, Baltimore, The Wire, Catterall Bob
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NC
Routledge
2010
593 - 739
Revue
Do Londoners have a right to the city?
, droit à la ville, équité sociale, injustice, planification, London, Londres, économie, mouvement social, Edwards Michael, Catterall Bob, Gibbons Andrea, Kuklowsky Celine
<div><b>Organisers' description : </b></div>
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London grassroot groups are certainly making it clear what they need, from housing and transport to jobs and the environment. Is there a basic demand that underlies these needs? Is the idea of rights to the city a focus for that demand? This meeting explores the idea that Right to the City (RTTC) is a good focus for these needs and demands. It is called by individuals from UCL's Bartlett School of Planning, UCL's Urban Lab, the London-based international journal CITY, and the Just Space Network of London community groups. The meeting is the start of a potential series triggered partly by the talks given last autumn in London by Peter Marcuse, veteran lawyer, planning educator and activist in New York. It takes advantage of the presence in London of 2 activists who have been involved with the US RTTC movement and of the discussion advanced and continuing in CITY by Peter Marcuse and his colleagues. This meeting will be a series of short talks on the London issues, a short talk on the USA movement and then time for a substantial structured debate and discussion.</div>
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<b>Michael Edwards </b>is a Senior Lecturer and Leverhulme Fellow in the Bartlett School of Planning at University College London.</div>
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<b>Bob Catterall </b>is Editor-in-Chief of City journal.</div>
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<b>Andrea Gibbons </b>is an assistant editor of City journal and a research student at the London School of Economics.</div>
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<b>Celine Kuklowsky </b>is an assistant editor of City journal and works in the Social Policy Department at the London School of Economics.</div>
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Michael Edwards,
Bob Catterall,
Andrea Gibbons,
Celine Kuklowsky
30 March 2010
http://justspace2010.wordpress.com/welcome-to-just-space/30-march-public-meeting/