“…A dominant focus of literature on enclave urbanism wrestles with questions of how and why aspirational residential geographies become fortressed and the implications of their design for the broader "spatial contract" defining the terms of engagement between neighborhoods (Atkinson and Blandy, 2006). In these varied analyses, the fortressed complex-be it a gated community (Davis, 1992;Low, 2003;Ellin, 1997), fortified neighborhood (Ballard and Jones, 2011;Calonge-Reillo, 2022), or privatized township (Knox, 2008;Pow, 2011;Srivastava, 2014)-emerges as a response to desires to secure the self, home, and community from perceived threats from the outside. Such spaces typically employ multiple security technologies, including walls, gates, guards, and security cameras, to deter threats and simulate order.…”