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"It's a fine book. Doubly so, for not only does it meld theoreticaldeftness with convincing empirical information, it also has thevirtue of taking us out of our English speaking milieu...Are you aninquisitive urban geographer? If so, having read Dikeç as yourindispensable primer, next time you're in Paris leave the EiffelTower behind and go out to La Courneuve. Or in Strasbourg, view thecathedral but then board the Line C tram right next to it whichtakes you out to Le Neuhof, like La Courneuve one of the originalsixteen social development urban neighborhoods. Get a taste ofanother, and real, urban France. Dikeç has." (GeographicalReview, December 2010)
"Dikec¸'s examination of French national policydevelopment toward the suburban banlieues is tight and focused inits objectives and execution." (Annals of the Association ofAmerican Geographers and The Professional Geographer)"This brilliant empirical riff by Mustafa Dikeç on Ranciere'sidea of the 'given' of governmental intervention as applied to the'banlieue' of French cities shows how attempts to realize the idealof 'the one and indivisible republic' through planning founderbecause French urban policy is also profoundly involved with makingplaces that violate that very ideal."
-John Agnew, UCLA
"This book is an extraordinary achievement. Hardly a year afterthe momentous revolts in the banlieues of France's big cities,Mustafa Dikeç offers not only a razor-sharp dissection ofurban struggles, but, more importantly, demonstrates how thepolitics of space work in today's France and how a progressiveurban politics can be reclaimed. A must read for all thoseinterested in urban social movements and have not given up on thepossibilities for a genuinely humanising urban politics."
-Erik Swyngedouw, Manchester University