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999 _c11237
_d11237
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008 210203b ||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
100 _aHilbrandt, Hanna
_942382
245 _aEveryday urbanism and the everyday state : Negotiating habitat in allotment gardens in Berlin
260 _bSage
_c2019
300 _aVol 56, Issue 2, 2019 : (352-367 p.)
520 _aThis paper is an inquiry into the powers at play in the everyday practices of making the city, and the social and spatial relations through which those who inhabit its margins put these powers to work. This exploration is based on a case study that considers informal housing practices and their regulation in allotment gardens in Berlin. To trace the mechanisms through which residents work to stay put in these sites, despite regulations prohibiting residency therein, the paper relates a debate on the transformative potential of the everyday to anthropological literature on the workings of the state, embedding this discussion in relational approaches to power and place. Joining these perspectives, I argue that the gardeners’ possibilities to stay put depend on the ways in which they meditate the presence of regulatory practices through their relations to state actors or institutional frames. These mediations not only highlight that people co-construct the order that takes shape, but also point to the boundaries of inclusion and exclusion built up along the way.
650 _aagglomeration/urbanisation
_931936
650 _apower
_942383
650 _ainformality
_939718
650 _agovernance
_942384
650 _adisplacement/gentrification
_942385
773 0 _011188
_915499
_dsage, 2019.
_tUrban studies
856 _uhttps://doi.org/10.1177/0042098017740304
942 _2ddc
_cART