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Description

This edited volume develops a theoretical framework for understanding how regimes of dispossession affect urban societies across the global south.

The book’s main arguments are built on a survey of the nearly two-hundred-year history of global dispossession studies and solid empirical evidence from three continents—Asia, Africa, and Latin America, and seven countries— Bangladesh, Brazil, Honduras, India, Lebanon, Nigeria, and Uganda. Eighteen scholars bring diverse perspectives and realities on urban dispossession. These varied contributions allow us to better understand how urban actors organize dispossession and govern the urban dispossessed, how the urban dispossessed arrange, experience and resist dispossession, and how urban dispossession contributes to creating/expanding capitalist systems or transforming urban societies in the global south.

The volume will appeal to students, scholars, planners, and practitioners across various social scientific disciplines, including sociology, anthropology, urban studies, political economy, international relations, political science, economics, gender studies, and geography.

Contributors are: Shapan Adnan, Orlando Alves dos Santos Junior, Fred Bidandi, David L. Brunsma, Tarcyla Fidalgo Ribeiro, Lakshmi Jahnavi, Marie Kolling, Ana Maria Kumarasamy, Barbara Lipietz, Lipon Mondal, Adrian Murray, John Nagle, Victor Udemezue Onyebueke, Taísa Sanches, Karen Spring, Susan Spronk, Luanda Vannuchi and Julian Walker.

Author Bios
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Publication date: October 2, 2026

Table of Contents

Contents
Foreword
Acknowledgements
List of Figures, Tables, and Photos
Notes on Contributors

1 Towards a New Debate on Urban Dispossession in the Global South
Lipon Mondal and David L. Brunsma

Part 1 The Formal Regime of Dispossession

2 Innovative Finance and Urban Dispossession: ‘A Plan for Everyone for a Better Life’ in Honduras
Adrian Murray, Karen Spring, and Susan Spronk

3 ‘Legitimized’ Evictions: Ambiguous Uses of Legal Instruments for Displacement in Urban Nigeria
Julian Walker, Victor Udemezue Onyebueke, and Barbara Lipietz

4 The Legal Regime of Dispossession in Urban India: a Study of Slum Evictions in Hyderabad and Visakhapatnam
Lakshmi Jahnavi

Part 2 The Informal Regime of Dispossession

5 Punishing the Urban Poor: a Violent Logic of Dispossession in Neoliberal Bangladesh
Lipon Mondal and David L. Brunsma

6 Illegalism, Dispossession, and Urban Space Production: the Case of the Militialization of Rio de Janeiro
Orlando Alves dos Santos Junior, Taísa Sanches, and Tarcyla Fidalgo Ribeiro

7 The Politics of Urban Planning and Dispossession in Kampala, Uganda
Fred Bidandi

Part 3 The Subaltern Regime of Dispossession

8 Contesting Urban Dispossession in Postwar Cities: Civic Protest in Beirut
Ana Maria Kumarasamy and John Nagle

9 Staging Dispossession: Struggles for Eviction and Inclusion among Brazil’s Roofless Population
Marie Kolling
 10 From Dispossession to Repossessions: Indigenous Retomadas in the Fragmented City
Luanda Vannuchi

Index

Reviews

Series

Part of the Studies in Critical Social Sciences series.