A fascinating read for anyone interested in the politics of disaster relief, Citizens without a City illustrates how survivors tried to remake effective political agency-and their lives-in a ruined town.
A fascinating read for anyone interested in the politics of disaster relief, Citizens without a City illustrates how survivors tried to remake effective political agency-and their lives-in a ruined town.
Jan-Jonathan Bock received his PhD in Social Anthropology from the University of Cambridge. He is editor (with Sharon Macdonald) of Refugees Welcome? Difference and Diversity in a Changing Germany and (with John Fahy and Samuel Everett) of Emergent Religious Pluralisms. Jan currently directs the Business Council for Democracy (BC4D) for the Hertie Foundation, Germany.
Inhaltsangabe
Acknowledgments 1. Introduction: The L'Aquila Earthquake 2. The State of Emergency 3. Disaster Politics and the War Among the Poor 4. Contesting Urban Recovery 5. Activism and Grassroots Politics 6. Culture and Social Recovery 7. Mourning in Court 8. Conclusion: A Future for L'Aquila Bibliography Index
Acknowledgments 1. Introduction: The L'Aquila Earthquake 2. The State of Emergency 3. Disaster Politics and the War Among the Poor 4. Contesting Urban Recovery 5. Activism and Grassroots Politics 6. Culture and Social Recovery 7. Mourning in Court 8. Conclusion: A Future for L'Aquila Bibliography Index
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