“…While the literature on urban movements underlines the importance of these insurgencies as politicized struggles against neoliberal urban restructuring, in recent years there has been growing concern over the outcomes of urban movements as well as the rapid fading away of urban insurgencies such as the Occupy movement and Gezi Park protests (Swyngedouw, ; Erensü and Karaman, ; García‐Lamarca, ). This suggests an urgent need to understand the nature of contemporary urban movements, the constraints and challenges they face, and the emerging fragmentations within them (Mayer, ; ; ; Uitermark, ; Lier and Stokke, ; Sites, ; Iveson, ), besides their potential to bring alternative solutions for urban issues to those imposed by the authorities, all of which define whether they are potential political actors or not.…”