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E-raamat: Illicit and Illegal in Regional and Urban Governance and Development: Corrupt Places

Edited by (Gran Sasso Science Institute, Italy), Edited by (University of Winchester, UK), Edited by (University of Durham, UK)
  • Formaat: 306 pages
  • Sari: Regions and Cities
  • Ilmumisaeg: 27-Sep-2017
  • Kirjastus: Routledge
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781315317649
  • Formaat - EPUB+DRM
  • Hind: 51,99 €*
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Discussions of the illicit and the illegal have tended to be somewhat restricted in their disciplinary range, to date, and have been largely confined to the literatures of anthropology, criminology, policing and, to an extent, political science. However, these debates have impinged little on cognate literatures, not least those of urban and regional studies which remain almost entirely undisturbed by such issues. This volume aims to open up debates across a range of cognate disciplines.

The Illicit and Illegal in Regional and Urban Governance and Development is a multidisciplinary volume that aims to open up these debates, extending them empirically and questioning the dominant discussions of governance and development that have been rooted largely or entirely in the realm of licit and legal actors. The book investigates these issues with reference to a variety of different geographical contexts, including, but not limited to, places traditionally considered to be associated with illegal activities and extensive illicit markets, such as some regions in the so-called Global South. The chapters consider the ways in which these questions deeply affect the daily lives of several cities and regions in some advanced countries. Their comparative perspectives will demonstrate that the illicit and the illegal are an underappreciated structural aspect of current urban and regional governance and development across the globe.

The book is an edited collection of research-informed essays, which will primarily be of interest to those taking advanced undergraduate and taught postgraduate courses in human geography, urban and regional planning and a range of social science disciplines that have an interest in urban and regional issues and issues related to crime and corruption.

Arvustused

"The diverse and rich contents of the book which have been briefly re-called in this review makes it suitable for a large audience, both in and outside the academic field. On the one hand, scholars and students from different disciplines, e.g. sociology, criminology, economics, political science, international relations, as well as geography of course, could find many empirical and analytical elements of interests in the volume. On the other hand, the book can also provide useful infor-mation and suggestions to public officers and policy makers for political projects and for the definition of new tools in fighting against criminal phenomena. Finally, the book could also rouse the attention of journalists and media commentators, considering the flurry international public debate about the drivers and the effects of the illicit and the illegal." - Joselle Dagnes, University of Torino

Illustrations
xv
Contributors xvi
Acknowledgements xxv
1 Grey governance and the development of cities and regions: The variable relationship between (il)legal and (il)licit
1(19)
Francesco Chiodelli
Tim Hall
Ray Hudson
Stefano Moroni
2 Drug trafficking in the Sahara Desert: Follow the money and find land grabbing
20(17)
Luca Raineri
3 Invisible journeys across India-Bangladesh borders and bubbles of corrupt networks: Stories of cross-border rural-urban migration and economic linkages
37(17)
Hosna J. Shewly
Md. Nadiruzzaman
4 Gangsters, guerrillas and the rise of a shadow state in East Timor
54(20)
James Scambary
5 Criminal networks, youth street groups and illicit territorial regulation in Moscow and Tbilisi
74(19)
Svetlana Stephenson
Evgenia Zakharova
6 Illegal enterprises and the city: When territorial control is an issue of urban governance. Lessons from Medellin, Colombia
93(14)
Laure Leibler
7 Mobs, sucanchiuostru, anti-communists: Global and local actors in the Sack of Palermo
107(15)
Vincenzo Scalia
8 Filling governance and development vacuums: A role for development actors or criminal groups?
122(19)
Sasha Jesperson
9 Planning for marijuana: Development, governance, and regional political economy
141(23)
Michael Polson
10 Embedding illegality, or when the illegal becomes licit: Planning cases and urban transformations in Rome
164(17)
Barbara Pizzo
Edoardo Altavilla
11 Building legitimacy through the spatial aesthetics of the illicit: Non-state urban actors in post-3.11 Japan
181(19)
Margrete Bjone Engelien
John Edom
Hannah Wood
12 The corruption of politics or the politics of corruption? Reconsidering the role of organised crime in the geo-politics of corruption
200(21)
Sue Penna
Martin O'Brien
13 Corrupt cities: The illicit in local urban development, the Spanish case
221(17)
Monica Garcia Quesada
Fernando Jimenez Sanchez
14 Corruption, crisis and planning policies: The Free-Trade Zone project in the metropolitan area of Valencia, Spain
238(18)
Jorge Ignacio Selfa Clemente
15 Who is corrupt and where lies corruption? Thinking with land use planning violations in Bangalore
256(19)
Jayaraj Sundaresan
Index 275
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.