Fr. 69.00

Illicit and Illegal in Regional and Urban Governance and Development - Corrupt Places

English · Paperback / Softback

New edition in preparation, currently unavailable

Description

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List of contents

List of Figures and Tables

List of Contributors

Acknowledgements

Chapter 1

Grey Governance and the Development of Cities and Regions: The Variable Relationship Between (Il)legal and (Ill)licit
Francesco Chiodelli, Tim Hall, Ray Hudson and Stefano Moroni

Chapter 2

Drug trafficking in the Sahara Desert: follow the money and find land grabbing
Luca Raineri

Chapter 3

Invisible journeys across India-Bangladesh borders and bubbles of corrupt networks: stories of cross-border rural-urban migration and economic linkages
Hosna J Shewly and Md Nadiruzzaman

Chapter 4

Gangsters, guerrillas and the rise of a shadow state in East Timor
James Scambary

Chapter 5

Criminal networks, youth street groups and illicit territorial regulation in Moscow and Tbilisi
Svetlana Stephenson and Evgeniya Zakharova

Chapter 6

Illegal enterprises and the city: when territorial control is an issue of urban governance Lessons from Medellín, Colombia
Laure Leibler

Chapter 7

Mobs, Sucanchiuostru, Anti-Communists: Global and Local Actors in the Sack of Palermo
Vincenzo Scalia

Chapter 8

Filling governance and development vacuums: a role for development actors or criminal groups?
Sasha Jesperson

Chapter 9

Planning for Marijuana: Development, Governance, and Regional Political Economy
Michael Polson

Chapter 10

Embedding illegality, or when the illegal becomes licit: planning cases and urban transformations in Rome
Barbara Pizzo and Edoardo Altavilla

Chapter 11

Building legitimacy through the spatial aesthetics of the illic

About the author

Francesco Chiodelli is Senior Research Fellow at Gran Sasso Science Institute, Italy.

Tim Hall is Professor of Interdisciplinary Social Studies and Head of the Department of Applied Social Sciences at the University of Winchester, UK.

Ray Hudson is Professor of Geography at Durham University, UK.

Summary

Discussions of the illicit and the illegal have tended to be somewhat restricted in their disciplinary range and have been largely confined to the literatures of anthropology, criminology, policing and, to an extent, political science. This book is a multidisciplinary volume that aims to open up these debates.

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