Langbeschreibung
Adopting an ethnographic approach in the study of community participation and power and the significance of 'race' in three ethnically diverse neighbourhoods in London, this book highlights that there has been a 'pluralistic turn' in British urban regeneration policy.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
Contents: Introduction: urban regeneration, community power and 'race'; The 'pluralistic turn' in urban regeneration policy; Regenerating pluralist theory and community power; An ethnographic approach to urban regeneration and community power; Northside: pragmatic pluralism and the declining significance of 'race'; Southside: hyper-pluralism and the fragmentation of local community'; Westside: paternalistic pluralism and the (over-)significance of 'race'; Conclusions: reconsidering community power and the significance of 'race'; Bibliography; Index.