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Migration, Urbanity and Cosmopolitanism in a Globalized World.

By: Lejeune, Catherine.
Contributor(s): Pag�es-El Karoui, Delphine | Schmoll, Camille | Thiollet, H�el�ene.
Material type: materialTypeLabelBookSeries: IMISCOE Research Series: Publisher: Cham : Springer International Publishing AG, 2021Copyright date: �2021Edition: 1st ed.Description: 1 online resource (183 pages).Content type: text Media type: computer Carrier type: online resourceISBN: 9783030673659.Genre/Form: Electronic books.Online resources: Click to View
Contents:
Migration, Urbanity and Cosmopolitanism in a Globalized World -- Acknowledgments -- Contents -- Contributors -- Chapter 1: Migration, Urbanity and Cosmopolitanism in a Globalized World: An Introduction -- 1.1 Cities and Urbanity -- 1.2 Cosmopolitanisms -- 1.3 Situating Cosmopolitanisms -- 1.4 Migrants and (Urban) Change -- References -- Part I: Making Cosmopolitan Places in a Globalized World -- Chapter 2: Generic Places, the Construction of Home and the Lived Experience of Cosmopolitanization -- 2.1 Introduction -- 2.2 Madrid: Building a Cosmopolitan Capital -- 2.3 Generic Places and the Construction of Home -- 2.4 Data and Methods -- 2.5 From the Ideal Cosmopolitan Subject to the Lived Experience of Cosmopolitanization -- 2.5.1 Place to Connect -- 2.5.2 A Place to Opt Out -- 2.5.3 A Place to Move -- 2.6 Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 3: Making Cosmopolitan Spaces: Urban Design, Ideology and Power -- 3.1 Introduction -- 3.2 Urban Design Meets the Public Space -- 3.2.1 The Public and the Private -- 3.3 Desire and Design -- 3.3.1 Fieldtrips: The Nexus Between Models and Inspiration -- 3.4 Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 4: Dakar by Night: Engaging with a Cosmopolitanism by Contrast -- 4.1 Introduction -- 4.2 The "Night Adventurers" in Dakar: Toward a Nocturnal Change of Scenery at Home -- 4.3 Urban Night Cosmopolitics -- 4.4 Conclusion: Cosmopolitanism as a Posture, the City as Accomplice -- References -- Chapter 5: Urban Cosmopolitanisms in the Arab World: Contributing to Theoretical Debates from the Middle East -- 5.1 Introduction -- 5.2 The End of Colonial Cosmopolitanism -- 5.3 Aden: Colonial Cosmopolitanism -- 5.4 The Cosmopolitan Capital: Forms of Social and Urban Differentiation -- 5.5 Cosmopolitanism Beyond Arab Cities -- References -- Part II: Urbanity and Everyday Cosmopolitanism in Ordinary Places.
Chapter 6: Cosmopolitan Dubai: Consumption and Segregation in a Global City -- 6.1 Introduction -- 6.2 A Consumerist and Segregated Cosmopolitanism in Global Dubai -- 6.2.1 Cosmopolitanism as a Form of Global Consumption -- 6.2.2 Segregation as a Response to Cosmopolitanism? -- 6.3 Consuming and Experiencing the Diversity of the World in Global Village -- 6.4 Cosmopolitanism and Segregation in International City -- 6.4.1 A Cosmopolitan Suburban Community for Low- and Middle-Class Foreign Residents -- 6.4.2 The Extension of the "Bachelor" Threat or the "Ethos of Non-Mixing" in International City -- 6.5 Conclusion: Thinking Cosmopolitanism Empirically from Dubai Ordinary Spaces -- References -- Chapter 7: Everyday Cosmopolitanism in African Cities: Places of Leisure and Consumption in Antananarivo and Maputo -- 7.1 Introduction: "Everyday Cosmopolitanism" and Africa -- 7.2 New Places of Cosmopolitan Sociability in African Cities -- 7.3 Users of Cosmopolitan Places: Diverse and Changing Profiles -- 7.4 Cosmopolitan Imaginations: Why Are These Places Successful with Nationals? -- 7.4.1 Participating in a Desired International Modernity -- 7.4.2 The Quest for a New and Not Exclusively Euro-American Exoticism -- 7.5 Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 8: What's in a Street? Exploring Suspended Cosmopolitanism in Trikoupi, Nicosia -- 8.1 A Street-Level Approach to Urban Cosmopolitanism -- 8.2 Locating Vulnerability: International Migration in Nicosia's City Center -- 8.3 Inhabiting Trikoupi -- 8.4 Working-Class Partnerships, Work Relations, Moral Orders: Between Tensions and Cooperation -- 8.5 Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 9: Branding Cosmopolitanism and Place Making in Saint Laurent Boulevard, Montreal -- 9.1 Introduction -- 9.2 City Branding in Montreal: Cosmopolitanism of the Saint-Laurent Boulevard.
9.3 Narrating an Idealized Cosmopolitanism as Heritage -- 9.4 Branding Cosmopolitanism: Commercial Stakeholders in Ethnic and Touristic Neighborhoods -- 9.4.1 Little Italy: Italianity as a Brand for the Boulevard and the Neighborhood -- 9.4.2 The Central Section of the Boulevard: Toward a More Inclusive and Cosmopolitan Image -- 9.5 Representations of the Boulevard by the Inhabitants: Authenticity or Artifice? -- 9.6 Conclusion -- References -- Part III: Migrant Cosmopolitanism: Fragile Belongings and Contested Citizenships -- Chapter 10: Sweeping the Streets, Cleaning Morals: Chinese Sex Workers in Paris Claiming Their Belonging to the Cosmopolitan City -- 10.1 Introduction -- 10.2 The Context: Chinese Prostitution in Gentrifying Districts of Paris -- 10.3 Cosmopolitanism from Below: A (Failed) Attempt to Redefine Local Diversity -- 10.4 Disorder, Moral and Diversity: (Failed) Redefinition of Gender Violence -- 10.5 Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 11: Cosmopolitanism in US Sanctuary Cities: Dreamers Claiming Urban Citizenship -- 11.1 Introduction -- 11.2 Sanctuary Cities Foster Urban Citizenship -- 11.3 Undocumented Migrant Activism -- 11.3.1 On Activism in High School -- 11.4 Concluding Remarks: Migrant Acts and Cosmopolitanism -- References -- Chapter 12: Migrant Cosmopolitanism in Emirati and Saudi Cities: Practices and Belonging in Exclusionary Contexts -- 12.1 Introduction -- 12.2 Residential Segregations, Dress Codes and Cosmopolitan Modes of Identification -- 12.3 Segregated Cosmopolitanisms in Shopping Malls -- 12.4 Cosmopolitan Streets: The Moral Geography of Coexistence and Encounters -- 12.5 Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 13: Figures of the Cosmopolitan Condition: The Wanderer, the Outcast, the Foreigner -- 13.1 Introduction -- 13.2 Wandering as Adventure and Border Encampment.
13.3 Becoming a Pariah: The Experience of Refugee Camps -- 13.4 Four Foreigners, and the Squat as Border -- 13.5 The "Tiers-Instruit" in His Labyrinth -- 13.6 A New Cosmopolitan Condition -- References.
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Migration, Urbanity and Cosmopolitanism in a Globalized World -- Acknowledgments -- Contents -- Contributors -- Chapter 1: Migration, Urbanity and Cosmopolitanism in a Globalized World: An Introduction -- 1.1 Cities and Urbanity -- 1.2 Cosmopolitanisms -- 1.3 Situating Cosmopolitanisms -- 1.4 Migrants and (Urban) Change -- References -- Part I: Making Cosmopolitan Places in a Globalized World -- Chapter 2: Generic Places, the Construction of Home and the Lived Experience of Cosmopolitanization -- 2.1 Introduction -- 2.2 Madrid: Building a Cosmopolitan Capital -- 2.3 Generic Places and the Construction of Home -- 2.4 Data and Methods -- 2.5 From the Ideal Cosmopolitan Subject to the Lived Experience of Cosmopolitanization -- 2.5.1 Place to Connect -- 2.5.2 A Place to Opt Out -- 2.5.3 A Place to Move -- 2.6 Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 3: Making Cosmopolitan Spaces: Urban Design, Ideology and Power -- 3.1 Introduction -- 3.2 Urban Design Meets the Public Space -- 3.2.1 The Public and the Private -- 3.3 Desire and Design -- 3.3.1 Fieldtrips: The Nexus Between Models and Inspiration -- 3.4 Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 4: Dakar by Night: Engaging with a Cosmopolitanism by Contrast -- 4.1 Introduction -- 4.2 The "Night Adventurers" in Dakar: Toward a Nocturnal Change of Scenery at Home -- 4.3 Urban Night Cosmopolitics -- 4.4 Conclusion: Cosmopolitanism as a Posture, the City as Accomplice -- References -- Chapter 5: Urban Cosmopolitanisms in the Arab World: Contributing to Theoretical Debates from the Middle East -- 5.1 Introduction -- 5.2 The End of Colonial Cosmopolitanism -- 5.3 Aden: Colonial Cosmopolitanism -- 5.4 The Cosmopolitan Capital: Forms of Social and Urban Differentiation -- 5.5 Cosmopolitanism Beyond Arab Cities -- References -- Part II: Urbanity and Everyday Cosmopolitanism in Ordinary Places.

Chapter 6: Cosmopolitan Dubai: Consumption and Segregation in a Global City -- 6.1 Introduction -- 6.2 A Consumerist and Segregated Cosmopolitanism in Global Dubai -- 6.2.1 Cosmopolitanism as a Form of Global Consumption -- 6.2.2 Segregation as a Response to Cosmopolitanism? -- 6.3 Consuming and Experiencing the Diversity of the World in Global Village -- 6.4 Cosmopolitanism and Segregation in International City -- 6.4.1 A Cosmopolitan Suburban Community for Low- and Middle-Class Foreign Residents -- 6.4.2 The Extension of the "Bachelor" Threat or the "Ethos of Non-Mixing" in International City -- 6.5 Conclusion: Thinking Cosmopolitanism Empirically from Dubai Ordinary Spaces -- References -- Chapter 7: Everyday Cosmopolitanism in African Cities: Places of Leisure and Consumption in Antananarivo and Maputo -- 7.1 Introduction: "Everyday Cosmopolitanism" and Africa -- 7.2 New Places of Cosmopolitan Sociability in African Cities -- 7.3 Users of Cosmopolitan Places: Diverse and Changing Profiles -- 7.4 Cosmopolitan Imaginations: Why Are These Places Successful with Nationals? -- 7.4.1 Participating in a Desired International Modernity -- 7.4.2 The Quest for a New and Not Exclusively Euro-American Exoticism -- 7.5 Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 8: What's in a Street? Exploring Suspended Cosmopolitanism in Trikoupi, Nicosia -- 8.1 A Street-Level Approach to Urban Cosmopolitanism -- 8.2 Locating Vulnerability: International Migration in Nicosia's City Center -- 8.3 Inhabiting Trikoupi -- 8.4 Working-Class Partnerships, Work Relations, Moral Orders: Between Tensions and Cooperation -- 8.5 Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 9: Branding Cosmopolitanism and Place Making in Saint Laurent Boulevard, Montreal -- 9.1 Introduction -- 9.2 City Branding in Montreal: Cosmopolitanism of the Saint-Laurent Boulevard.

9.3 Narrating an Idealized Cosmopolitanism as Heritage -- 9.4 Branding Cosmopolitanism: Commercial Stakeholders in Ethnic and Touristic Neighborhoods -- 9.4.1 Little Italy: Italianity as a Brand for the Boulevard and the Neighborhood -- 9.4.2 The Central Section of the Boulevard: Toward a More Inclusive and Cosmopolitan Image -- 9.5 Representations of the Boulevard by the Inhabitants: Authenticity or Artifice? -- 9.6 Conclusion -- References -- Part III: Migrant Cosmopolitanism: Fragile Belongings and Contested Citizenships -- Chapter 10: Sweeping the Streets, Cleaning Morals: Chinese Sex Workers in Paris Claiming Their Belonging to the Cosmopolitan City -- 10.1 Introduction -- 10.2 The Context: Chinese Prostitution in Gentrifying Districts of Paris -- 10.3 Cosmopolitanism from Below: A (Failed) Attempt to Redefine Local Diversity -- 10.4 Disorder, Moral and Diversity: (Failed) Redefinition of Gender Violence -- 10.5 Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 11: Cosmopolitanism in US Sanctuary Cities: Dreamers Claiming Urban Citizenship -- 11.1 Introduction -- 11.2 Sanctuary Cities Foster Urban Citizenship -- 11.3 Undocumented Migrant Activism -- 11.3.1 On Activism in High School -- 11.4 Concluding Remarks: Migrant Acts and Cosmopolitanism -- References -- Chapter 12: Migrant Cosmopolitanism in Emirati and Saudi Cities: Practices and Belonging in Exclusionary Contexts -- 12.1 Introduction -- 12.2 Residential Segregations, Dress Codes and Cosmopolitan Modes of Identification -- 12.3 Segregated Cosmopolitanisms in Shopping Malls -- 12.4 Cosmopolitan Streets: The Moral Geography of Coexistence and Encounters -- 12.5 Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 13: Figures of the Cosmopolitan Condition: The Wanderer, the Outcast, the Foreigner -- 13.1 Introduction -- 13.2 Wandering as Adventure and Border Encampment.

13.3 Becoming a Pariah: The Experience of Refugee Camps -- 13.4 Four Foreigners, and the Squat as Border -- 13.5 The "Tiers-Instruit" in His Labyrinth -- 13.6 A New Cosmopolitan Condition -- References.

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Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2023. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.

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