2013
DOI: 10.1007/s12116-013-9133-z
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The Politics of Urban Violence: Challenges for Development in the Global South

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Cited by 114 publications
(56 citation statements)
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References 102 publications
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“…Although this and related concepts will not be covered in detail in this paper [5], habitus disposes youths to make their own transition to a culturally valued, and thus common and reproduced, gendered self; expressing agency and dynamism in doing so, though their subjectively held experience of masculinisation. In short boys are disposed to become men in a way that reflects the older men around them.…”
Section: Masculinities and Violence ''Reproduction''mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Although this and related concepts will not be covered in detail in this paper [5], habitus disposes youths to make their own transition to a culturally valued, and thus common and reproduced, gendered self; expressing agency and dynamism in doing so, though their subjectively held experience of masculinisation. In short boys are disposed to become men in a way that reflects the older men around them.…”
Section: Masculinities and Violence ''Reproduction''mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These elements of, in the first instance, complexity and contestation, and in the second instance, continuity and consensus within the Brazilian state, support the argument that, when not applied with great care, urban neoliberalization theory can end up concealing as much as it reveals about cities of the global South (Parnell and Robinson, ). Unlike in the global North—where inequalities of capitalist development may often be tempered by state involvement (Fainstein, )—in the global South, greater state involvement by no means leads to more equal public benefits (see also Bezmez, ; Moncada, ). Yet, on the other hand, the central role of the Brazilian state in processes of securitization and social cleansing and also in the provision of housing and infrastructure in lower‐income areas makes it problematic to label these policies collectively as ‘neoliberal'.…”
Section: Discussion: a Post‐third‐world City Or Neoliberal City Of Exmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Respondents from thirty-six developing countries ranked crime as one of their top two concerns in the 2010-2014 wave of the World Values Survey. 19 Public concern is also understandable in light of the prevalence of police inefficacy, corruption, and human rights violations (e.g., Hinton and Newburn, 2009;Moncada, 2013). Despite its fundamental importance, however, the politics of law and order has received little attention from scholars of comparative politics until recently.…”
Section: Cities and The Rule Of Lawmentioning
confidence: 99%