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This book conceptualises and illustrates temporary appropriation as an urban phenomenon, exploring its contributions to citizenship, urban social sustainability and urban health.
Chapter 1 General Introduction.- Chapter 2 Understanding the Temporary Appropriation in Relationship to Social Sustainability.- Chapter 3 Between Assemblages and Temporary Appropriation: The Case of Mexico City.- Chapter 4 Temporary Appropriation and Informality.- Chapter 5 Ongoing Appropriation: Invisible Seattle and Red May.- Chapter 6 Temporary Appropriation and Public Space: Assessing the CPTED Principle of Activity Support.- Chapter 7 Temporary Appropriation of Public Spaces: The Influence of Outdoor Comfort.- Chapter 8 Origins of Informality: Examining the Historical and Spatial Roots of Informal Day-Labor Hiring Sites.- Chapter 9 Unsheltered Homelessness and the Right to Metabolism: An Urban Political Ecology of Health and Sustainability.- Chapter 10 Temporary Appropriation in Shanghai and Hong Kong: Two Study Cases Assessing the Resilience of Women Faced With the Lack of Affordable Housing.- Chapter 11 (Temporary) Appropriation (Of Space), Makassar, and Urban Kampung.- Chapter 12 Extending Temporary Appropriation Through Architecture: The Role of Adaptive Reuse in Shaping New Zealand’s Built Environment.- Chapter 13 Using the Street in Mexico City Centre: Temporary Appropriation of Public Space Vs Legislation Governing Street Use.- Chapter 14 Transforming Everyday Public Space: Human Appropriations in Search for Citizenship and Urban Well-Being.- Chapter 15 General Conclusion.
Antonino Di Raimo, Steffen Lehmann, Alessandro Melis, UK) Di Raimo, Antonino (University of Portsmouth, USA) Lehmann, Steffen (University of Nevada, UK) Melis, Alessandro (University of Portsmouth
Antonino Di Raimo, Steffen Lehmann, Alessandro Melis, UK) Di Raimo, Antonino (University of Portsmouth, USA) Lehmann, Steffen (University of Nevada, UK) Melis, Alessandro (University of Portsmouth