Cities: From The Right To The City To The... - Rebel
: Using examples from Johannesburg and Mumbai to New York and São Paulo, Harvey argues that urban rebellions are no longer localized events but part of a global struggle against neoliberalism. Discussion & Critical Perspectives
: Harvey illustrates how capitalism uses urbanization as a tool to absorb surplus capital, often leading to "accumulation by dispossession" where the poor are displaced to make way for high-value development. Rebel Cities: From the Right to the City to the...
From the Right to the City to Urban Revolution - Paramjit Singh, 2014 : Using examples from Johannesburg and Mumbai to
In his influential 2012 book, , David Harvey argues that the city is the primary site for anti-capitalist resistance. He builds on Henri Lefebvre's 1968 concept of the "right to the city"—not just as a right to access what exists, but as a collective power to fundamentally reshape urban life and the urbanization process. Key Themes & Features He builds on Henri Lefebvre's 1968 concept of
: The book transitions from the "right to the city" toward a more radical "urban revolution." Harvey suggests that revolutionary focus should shift from the traditional factory floor to the city streets and the "precariat" class.