Print Email Facebook Twitter Cities for or against citizens? Socio-spatial restructuring of low-income neighborhoods and the paradox of citizen participation. Title Cities for or against citizens? Socio-spatial restructuring of low-income neighborhoods and the paradox of citizen participation. Author Perez Rendon, G. (TU Delft Spatial Planning and Strategy) Contributor Stouten, P.L.M. (promotor) Nadin, V. (promotor) Degree granting institution Delft University of Technology Date 2018-04-10 Abstract Urban renewal has evolved into an ambitious and sophisticated urban strategy, recognised as urban revitalisation in America and urban regeneration in Western Europe. This new urban strategy, which tends to be area-based and state-sponsored, claims for the most part to coordinate a wide range of resources, partners and public agencies to bring about social, economic and spatial improvements in underdeveloped and impoverished city areas while improving the livelihoods of the local residents. However, as this study asserts, the objectives behind this new urban strategy have considered, for the most part, the interests of those formulating and implementing such efforts rather than local residents and stakeholders, and produced in turn ‘attractive’ neighbourhoods increasing city revenues, boosting real estate prices, attracting new investments and alluring new residents. Most importantly, citizen participation and gentrification have been concurrently promoted in urban... To reference this document use: http://resolver.tudelft.nl/uuid:8121cc7b-4969-44c8-b08d-8f32c54ecece DOI https://doi.org/10.7480/abe.2018.6 Publisher A+BE | Architecture and the Built Environment ISBN 978-94-6366-023-5 Bibliographical note A+BE | Architecture and the Built Environment No 6 (2018) Part of collection Institutional Repository Document type doctoral thesis Rights © 2018 G. Perez Rendon Files PDF Dissertation_Gabriela_Per ... Rendon.pdf 30.88 MB Close viewer /islandora/object/uuid:8121cc7b-4969-44c8-b08d-8f32c54ecece/datastream/OBJ/view