“…Furthermore, these architects, anthropologists, and planners lobbied for public interventions that would upgrade what they described as self-help neighborhoods, guiding and supporting the production of self-help housing and learning from its strengths (Peattie, 1968;Turner, 1972). Four decades later, with changing economic and political circumstances, the commodification of urban land, and numerous other changes in the global political economy, some of the shortcomings of this approach have become increasingly visible (Fawaz, 2009b). In particular, the Marxist critique denouncing the way in which self-help advocates failed to question the larger framework of inequality, celebrating resilience sometimes in circumstances where low-income city dwellers were exposed to excessive hardship, proved particularly prescient of the dismal housing conditions with which many city dwellers struggle with today (Burgess, 1982(Burgess, , 1985.…”