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Full Description
How is tolerance reflected in urban space? Which urban actors are involved in the practices and narratives of tolerance? What are the limits of tolerance? The edited volume answers these questions by considering different forms of urban in/exclusion and participatory citizenship. By drawing together disparate yet critical writings, Doing Tolerance examines the production of space, urban struggles and tactics of power from an interdisciplinary perspective. Illustrating the paradoxes within diverse interactions, the authors focus on the conflict between heterogeneous groups of the governed, on the one hand, and the governing in urban spaces, on the other. Above all, the volume explores the divergences and convergences of participatory citizenship, as they are revealed in urban space through political, socio-economic and cultural conditions and the entanglements of social mobilities.
Contents
Maria do Mar Castro Varela, Refugees, the extreme Right and Europe's ToleranceBaris Ulker, On the Shores of Urban ToleranceDerya Ozkan, Urban Commoners in Istanbul: From Oda Projesi to Gezi ResistancePelin Tan, Practices of Commoning and Urban CitizenshipAdham Hamed, The Ethics of Violence at the Margins of TahrirLiza Kam, Colonial Nostalgia as Toolkit to Fight Colonial Legacy- From Queen's Pier to the Umbrella Movement in Hong KongGulden Ediger, LGBT-MovementMargit Mayer, Urban Uprisings versus Participatory CitizenshipUlrike Hamann, The Urban Poor Between Democracy and Protest: Kotti & Co Adresses the Social Housing Problem of BerlinDilek Ozhan Kocak, Urban GuerrillasOmer Turan, The Gezi Park Protest and the World of the GiftJulia Strutz, Spiriting off the Bad Urbanite: From the Topkapi Bus Terminal to the Panorama Museum 1453