Synopses & Reviews
Synopsis
1. Introduction: Putting Wacquant to Work; John Flint and Ryan Powell
2. Class, Ethnicity and State in the Making of Urban Marginality; Loїc Wacquant
Part 1 -Class: Gender, Families and Surveillance
3. 'We live like prisoners in a camp': Surveillance, Governance and Agency in a US Housing Project; Talja Blokland
4. Maternal Outcasts: Governing Vulnerable Mothers in Advanced Marginality; Larissa Povey
5. Exploring Family-Based Intervention Mechanisms as a Form of Statecraft; Emily Ball
Part 2 - Ethnicity: Invisibilization, Informality and (Dis) identifications
6. Fluid Identifications in the Age of Advanced Marginality; Fabien Truong (translated by Lorenzo Posocco)
7. Informality and the Neo-Ghetto: Modulating Power Through Roma Camps; Isabella Clough Marinaro
8. Housing, Ethnicity and Advanced Marginality in England; Ryan Powell and David Robinson
Part 3 - State: Governing Marginality-Home, Street, Neighbourhood, City
9. All Leviathan's Children: Race, Punishment and the (Re-)Making of the City; Rueben Miller
10. Social Work and Advanced Marginality; Ian Cummins
11. Bringing the Third Sector Back into Ghetto Studies: Roma Segregation and Civil Society Associations in Italy
12. Between Street and Shelter: Seclusion, Exclusion, and the
Neutralization of Poverty
Response
13. Dispossession and Dishonour in the Polarized Metropolis: Reactions and Recommendations; Loїc Wacquant
Synopsis
- Provides a specific focus on class and ethnicity as elements of urban marginality and demonstrates the importance of a spatial understanding of these processes.
- Provides critical engagement with Loic Wacquant's work challenging them and developing them in innovative and ground-breaking ways
- Takes a genuinely international and interdisciplinary approach, utilising a range of national and policy contexts and combining robust empirical data with new theoretical and conceptual frameworks
- Includes contributions from both established and emerging leading urban scholars at the cutting edge of urban studies
Synopsis
Lo c Wacquant is one of the most influential sociological theorists of the contemporary era with his research and writings resonating widely across the social sciences. This edited collection critically responds to Wacquant's distinct approach to understanding the contemporary urban condition in advanced capitalist societies. It comprises chapters focused on Europe and North America from leading international scholars and new emergent voices, which chart new empirical, theoretical and methodological territory. Pivoting on the relationship between class, ethnicity and the state in the (re-)making of urban marginality, the volume takes stock of Wacquant's body of work and assesses its value as a springboard for rethinking urban inequality in polarizing times.
Heeding Wacquant's call for constant theoretical critique and development in understanding dynamic urban relations and processes, the contributions challenge, develop and refine Wacquant's framework, while also synthesizing it with other perspectives and bringing it into dialogue with new areas of inquiry. How can Wacquant's work aid the empirical understanding of today's complex urban inequalities? And how can empirical investigation and theoretical synthesis aid the development of Wacquant's framework? The diverse contributors to the collection ask these, and other, searching questions - and Wacquant responds to this critique in the final chapter.
This book will be of interest to scholars engaged in understanding the drivers, contexts, and potential responses to contemporary urban marginality.