Defying Displacement: Urban Recomposition and Social War

Author:   Andrew Lee
Publisher:   AK Press
Volume:   9
ISBN:  

9781849355247


Pages:   216
Publication Date:   03 October 2024
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Available To Order   Availability explained
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Defying Displacement: Urban Recomposition and Social War


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Author:   Andrew Lee
Publisher:   AK Press
Imprint:   AK Press
Volume:   9
Dimensions:   Width: 13.40cm , Height: 2.00cm , Length: 20.30cm
Weight:   0.249kg
ISBN:  

9781849355247


ISBN 10:   184935524
Pages:   216
Publication Date:   03 October 2024
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Available To Order   Availability explained
We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately.

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"""So often gentrification is a process understood in limited terms as a flow of people or the impersonal and inevitable flow of capital. In Defying Displacement, Andrew Lee analyzes both in tandem, illuminating how gentrification transforms not only housing markets, but the horizon of possibility for revolt. Regardless of where they are reading from, readers will be able to understand this subject with a fresh appreciation of how global struggles past, present, and future are linked by the making and unmaking of cities."" --Ayesha Siddiqi, editor in chief of The New Inquiry ""All too often, gentrification is treated as a kind of moral failure in personal choice or preference, or, even worse, is treated as inevitable. Andrew Lee's Defying Displacement does the invaluable work of placing gentrification in its proper global economic and political contexts, without losing sight of its devastating personal and local impacts and longstanding role in settler-colonialism and white supremacy. Putting in-depth research in broad social and economic trends alongside interviews with displaced people and reporting on the sites of struggle and resistance against gentrification, the book allows the analyses of those most affected and engaged in struggle to shape its arguments. In doing so, Defying Displacement opens up an exciting theory of the state and capitalism, while showing how people struggling over cities, neighborhoods, and homes are poised to overthrow them. More than a right to the city, this book shows how a fight for the city can mean the fight for total liberation, and is a needful resource for all those who fight for and dream of a better world."" --Vicky Osterweil, author of In Defense of Looting ""Andrew deftly outlines the urgency of the housing crisis by centering those that should always be at the crux of the conversation, and calls for the radical resistance that displacement deserves."" --Nicole Cardoza, founder of Anti-Racism Daily ""This book could be extremely useful to activists. Keep using the enemy's own history against them. This ain't capitalist 'progress, ' it's class warfare and ethnic cleansing. Let's organize the hood! Reclaim the city for the people! All power to the people!"" --Lorenzo Kom'boa Ervin, author of Anarchism and the Black Revolution"


All too often, gentrification is treated as a kind of moral failure in personal choice or preference, or, even worse, is treated as inevitable. Andrew Lee's Defying Displacement does the invaluable work of placing gentrification in its proper global economic and political contexts, without losing sight of its devastating personal and local impacts and longstanding role in settler-colonialism and white supremacy. Putting in-depth research in broad social and economic trends alongside interviews with displaced people and reporting on the sites of struggle and resistance against gentrification, the book allows the analyses of those most affected and engaged in struggle to shape its arguments. In doing so, Defying Displacement opens up an exciting theory of the state and capitalism, while showing how people struggling over cities, neighborhoods, and homes are poised to overthrow them. More than a right to the city, this book shows how a fight for the city can mean the fight for total liberation, and is a needful resource for all those who fight for and dream of a better world. --Vicky Osterweil, author of In Defense of Looting Andrew deftly outlines the urgency of the housing crisis by centering those that should always be at the crux of the conversation, and calls for the radical resistance that displacement deserves. --Nicole Cardoza, founder of Anti-Racism Daily So often gentrification is a process understood in limited terms as a flow of people or the impersonal and inevitable flow of capital. In Defying Displacement, Andrew Lee analyzes both in tandem, illuminating how gentrification transforms not only housing markets, but the horizon of possibility for revolt. Regardless of where they are reading from, readers will be able to understand this subject with a fresh appreciation of how global struggles past, present, and future are linked by the making and unmaking of cities. --Ayesha Siddiqi, editor in chief of The New Inquiry This book could be extremely useful to activists. Keep using the enemy's own history against them. This ain't capitalist 'progress, ' it's class warfare and ethnic cleansing. Let's organize the hood! Reclaim the city for the people! All power to the people! --Lorenzo Kom'boa Ervin, author of Anarchism and the Black Revolution


Author Information

Andrew Lee has been involved with grassroots anti-displacement campaigns in San José, California. He currently lives in Philadelphia, where he continues to work on similar issues. He has written for Yes! Magazine, Teen Vogue, and The Progressive and serves as Managing Editor for The Anti-Racism Daily.

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