Gentrification & Crime: New Configurations and Challenges for the City

This volume is the editorial product of the project “Gentrification and Crime. New Configurations and Challenges for the City” started by a public conference held on May 6, 2019 at the Municipal Historical Archive of Palermo. This event was organized by Locus and endorsed by private and public bodie...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Bonura, Massimo (author), Arena, Alessio (author), Mirabile, Mario (author), Cattafi, Carmelo (author), La Spina, Antonio (author), Bighelli, Cecilia (author), Panagiotakopoulos, Dimitrios (author), Cabras, Edoardo (author)
Other Authors: Leoni, Giovanni (editor), Hein, C.M. (editor), Semi, Giovanni (editor), La Spina, Antonio (editor), Mirabile, Mario (editor), Cabras, Edoardo (editor)
Format: Book
Language:English
Published: TU Delft OPEN 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:http://resolver.tudelft.nl/uuid:4af428de-35bd-401a-8d61-4a16e5ce0747
Description
Summary:This volume is the editorial product of the project “Gentrification and Crime. New Configurations and Challenges for the City” started by a public conference held on May 6, 2019 at the Municipal Historical Archive of Palermo. This event was organized by Locus and endorsed by private and public bodies. During the conference, four presentations were given by distinguished academics of main fields investigated: Giovanni Semi, Marco Picone, Adam Asmundo, Antonio La Spina. Journalist Elvira Terranova moderated the event. This publication was born from the desire to investigate gentrification and crime through a multidisciplinary approach. It draws inspiration from the urban sociologist Henri Lefebvre and his fundamental work The Production of Space on how the subject in its corporeality and in its interactions with the other integrates and produces spaces. The people involved in the project stem from different fields: geographers, urban sociologists and criminologists, architects and urban planners, historians, and other representatives of civil society. That being said, given this project’s cross-disciplinary nature, contributors are given some creative freedom to flesh-out their own conceptualizations. As such, it is appropriate to cultivate an understanding of the intellectual framework and foundation underpinning this work. History, Form & Aesthetics