2000
DOI: 10.15760/etd.5355
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Regulating Pavement Dwellers: The Politics of the Visibly Poor in Public Space

Abstract: Many researchers argue the increasing reliance on sit/lie ordinances to regulate homeless people's use of public space is one in a suite of neoliberal policies that shape the geographies of public space in cities to serve the needs of global capital. However, these policies are developed at the local, not global, level as specific actors make claims in the public sphere that communicatively shape policy formation. Through comparative case study, this research asks, how do different actors, situated in specific… Show more

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