Urban Revolt: State Power and the Rise of People's Movements in the Global South
The urban poor and working class now make up the majority of the world’s population and this segment is growing dramatically as the global population expands to 10 billion by mid-century. Much of the population growth results from the displacement of rural peasants to the urban cores, resulting in the vast expansion of mega-cities with 10 to 20 million people in the global South. The proliferation of informal settlements and slums particularly in the global south have created the conditions in which urban areas have become the principal sites of social upheaval as people seek to improve their living conditions. Drawing from case studies in Africa, Latin America, and Asia, the various chapters in this book map and analyze the ways in which the majority of the world exists and struggles in the contemporary urban context.

Advancing beyond a liberal perspective, the book unpacks the ways in which Urban Social Movements (USMs) in the global south have challenged or transformed how the city is organized and the possibilities that they have created for a revolutionary alternative to the capitalist hegemonic framework.
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Urban Revolt: State Power and the Rise of People's Movements in the Global South
The urban poor and working class now make up the majority of the world’s population and this segment is growing dramatically as the global population expands to 10 billion by mid-century. Much of the population growth results from the displacement of rural peasants to the urban cores, resulting in the vast expansion of mega-cities with 10 to 20 million people in the global South. The proliferation of informal settlements and slums particularly in the global south have created the conditions in which urban areas have become the principal sites of social upheaval as people seek to improve their living conditions. Drawing from case studies in Africa, Latin America, and Asia, the various chapters in this book map and analyze the ways in which the majority of the world exists and struggles in the contemporary urban context.

Advancing beyond a liberal perspective, the book unpacks the ways in which Urban Social Movements (USMs) in the global south have challenged or transformed how the city is organized and the possibilities that they have created for a revolutionary alternative to the capitalist hegemonic framework.
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Urban Revolt: State Power and the Rise of People's Movements in the Global South

Urban Revolt: State Power and the Rise of People's Movements in the Global South

Urban Revolt: State Power and the Rise of People's Movements in the Global South

Urban Revolt: State Power and the Rise of People's Movements in the Global South

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Overview

The urban poor and working class now make up the majority of the world’s population and this segment is growing dramatically as the global population expands to 10 billion by mid-century. Much of the population growth results from the displacement of rural peasants to the urban cores, resulting in the vast expansion of mega-cities with 10 to 20 million people in the global South. The proliferation of informal settlements and slums particularly in the global south have created the conditions in which urban areas have become the principal sites of social upheaval as people seek to improve their living conditions. Drawing from case studies in Africa, Latin America, and Asia, the various chapters in this book map and analyze the ways in which the majority of the world exists and struggles in the contemporary urban context.

Advancing beyond a liberal perspective, the book unpacks the ways in which Urban Social Movements (USMs) in the global south have challenged or transformed how the city is organized and the possibilities that they have created for a revolutionary alternative to the capitalist hegemonic framework.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781608467136
Publisher: Haymarket Books
Publication date: 06/06/2017
Edition description: New Edition
Pages: 222
Product dimensions: 8.90(w) x 6.00(h) x 0.60(d)

About the Author

Trevor Ngwane: Trevor Ngwane is a scholar activist who has over the years devoted as much time to academic work as to community and political activism. He studied at the University of Fort Hare during the apartheid days for four years and did not graduate due to various “student disturbances”. He obtained his BA (Sociology and Psychology) degree through the
University of South Africa and his BA Honours (Sociology) at the University of the Witwatersrand and PhD at the University of Johannesburg (2016) For two decades he has been active in the trade unions, social movements and political organisations as an organiser and militant, a period that spanned the transition from apartheid to a democratic society. He was also involved in the international movement for social and economic justice and was active for several years in the African Social Forum, a component of the World Social Forum. In 2011 he obtained his MA at the University of KwaZulu-Natal’s School of Development Studies and is currently reading for a PhD at the University of Johannesburg where he is attached to the Research Chair for Social Change in which he is a researcher in the Rebellion of the Poor protest monitoring and database compilation project. Ngwane is currently active in the Socialist Group, Democratic Left Front and United Front, organisations that seek a pro-working class pro-poor future for South Africa and the world.

Immanuel Ness: Immanuel Ness, PhD, is professor of political science at Brooklyn College of the City University of New York. His research focuses on working class mobilization, Global South workers, migration, resistance and social movements. Ness is author of Southern Insurgency: The Coming of the Global Working Class (Pluto, 2015); Guest Workers and Resistance to US Corporate Despotism (University of Illinois 2011) and Immigrants, Unions, and the U.S. Labor Market (Temple UniversityPress 2005). He is General Editor with Peter Bellwood of Encyclopedia of Global Human Migration, 5 volumes (2013). He is finishing a book on migration and inequality in the Global South. Ness is editor of New Forms of Worker Organization (Oakland: PM Press) and co-editor with Dario Azzellini of Ours to Master and to Own: Worker Control from the Commune to the Present (Haymarket 2011). He is editor of the peer-review quarterly journal, Working USA: The Journal of Labor and Society.

Luke Sinwell: Luke Sinwell, Witwatersrand University, Johannesburg, South Africa, PhD, is currently a Senior Researcher with the South African Research Chair in Social Change, University of Johannesburg. His research interests include the politics and conceptualisation of participatory development and governance, social movements and housing struggles, direct action as a method to transform power relations, ethnographic research methods and action research. Luke is the author of several chapters in books and has published in a range of academic journals. He is a co-author of Marikana: A View from the Mountain and a Case to Answer (Jacana 2012, Bookmarks and Ohio UniversityPress 2013) and the co-editor of Contesting Transformation: Popular Resistance in Twenty-First Century South Africa (Pluto Press 2012).

Table of Contents

  • Introduction
  • Part I: Urban Revolt in Africa


  • Chapter 1: Thembelihle, South Africa Burning, Hope Rising

    Chapter 2: Community and Worker Responses to the Marikana Massacre

    Chapter 3: Makoko Stilt Slum settlement of Migrant Artisans on the Lagos
  • Part II: Urban Revolt in Asia


  • Chapter 4: Political Economy of Mass Dispossession: Neoliberal urbanism, Struggle for Justice and the Case of Nonadanga Eviction in Kolkata

    Chapter 5: Urban expansion and slum clearance in Mandala community of Mumbai from 2012-present

    Chapter 6: Privatization of Mumbai Airport: Evictions, Resistance, and Rehabilitation

    Chapter 7: The Struggle of Urban Poor against Forced Eviction in Jakarta, Indonesia
  • Part III: Urban Revolt in Latin America


Chapter 8: Mexico: The Ayitzonapa Massacre: Mexico Popular Protests and the new landscapes of indignation

Chapter 9: The Uruguayan Recycler’s Union: Clasificadores, Circulation and the Challenge of Mobile Unionism

Chapter 10: Strategies for Militants in Violent Zones: urban revolt, and social movement adaptions in Rio de Janeiro- Brazil

Chapter 11: Policing protest in contemporary Brazil: class and race bias in State repression against activists
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