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Fierce and accommodationist divided cities: understanding right-to-the-city protests in Beirut and Manama

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Fierce and accommodationist divided cities: understanding right-to-the-city protests in Beirut and Manama. / Nagle, John; Mabon, Simon.
In: Peacebuilding, Vol. 11, No. 4, 02.10.2023, p. 381-402.

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Nagle J, Mabon S. Fierce and accommodationist divided cities: understanding right-to-the-city protests in Beirut and Manama. Peacebuilding. 2023 Oct 2;11(4):381-402. Epub 2023 Jul 4. doi: 10.1080/21647259.2023.2219119

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@article{9c28b55b94c145079cbb4d4ce9ed6c47,
title = "Fierce and accommodationist divided cities: understanding right-to-the-city protests in Beirut and Manama",
abstract = "Divided cities have attracted mounting scholarly attention. Yet, while the focus has largely been on how divisions are constructed, we examine the potentiality of waves of non-sectarian protest movements as urban peacebuilding actors. Towards this, we draw on comparative research on protests in two divided cities in the MENA region, Beirut (Lebanon) and Manama (Bahrain). These two cities, we argue, represent contrasting forms of divided city, marked by different approaches to dealing with sectarian pluralism that ultimately entrench sectarianism and inequality. Protest movements thus represent right-to-the-city mobilisations oriented towards demands for inclusive urban living. These movements foster {\textquoteleft}insurgent citizenship, an articulation of urban belonging and citizenship that focusses on confronting and destabilising the entrenched regimes of citizen inequality. However, while these protests are important peacebuilding actors, we note the profound structural and agential forces that limit the movement{\textquoteright}s goals.",
keywords = "Right-to-the-city, Beirut, Manama, Peacebuilding, Protest",
author = "John Nagle and Simon Mabon",
year = "2023",
month = oct,
day = "2",
doi = "10.1080/21647259.2023.2219119",
language = "English",
volume = "11",
pages = "381--402",
journal = "Peacebuilding",
issn = "2164-7259",
publisher = "Informa UK Limited",
number = "4",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Fierce and accommodationist divided cities

T2 - understanding right-to-the-city protests in Beirut and Manama

AU - Nagle, John

AU - Mabon, Simon

PY - 2023/10/2

Y1 - 2023/10/2

N2 - Divided cities have attracted mounting scholarly attention. Yet, while the focus has largely been on how divisions are constructed, we examine the potentiality of waves of non-sectarian protest movements as urban peacebuilding actors. Towards this, we draw on comparative research on protests in two divided cities in the MENA region, Beirut (Lebanon) and Manama (Bahrain). These two cities, we argue, represent contrasting forms of divided city, marked by different approaches to dealing with sectarian pluralism that ultimately entrench sectarianism and inequality. Protest movements thus represent right-to-the-city mobilisations oriented towards demands for inclusive urban living. These movements foster ‘insurgent citizenship, an articulation of urban belonging and citizenship that focusses on confronting and destabilising the entrenched regimes of citizen inequality. However, while these protests are important peacebuilding actors, we note the profound structural and agential forces that limit the movement’s goals.

AB - Divided cities have attracted mounting scholarly attention. Yet, while the focus has largely been on how divisions are constructed, we examine the potentiality of waves of non-sectarian protest movements as urban peacebuilding actors. Towards this, we draw on comparative research on protests in two divided cities in the MENA region, Beirut (Lebanon) and Manama (Bahrain). These two cities, we argue, represent contrasting forms of divided city, marked by different approaches to dealing with sectarian pluralism that ultimately entrench sectarianism and inequality. Protest movements thus represent right-to-the-city mobilisations oriented towards demands for inclusive urban living. These movements foster ‘insurgent citizenship, an articulation of urban belonging and citizenship that focusses on confronting and destabilising the entrenched regimes of citizen inequality. However, while these protests are important peacebuilding actors, we note the profound structural and agential forces that limit the movement’s goals.

KW - Right-to-the-city

KW - Beirut

KW - Manama

KW - Peacebuilding

KW - Protest

U2 - 10.1080/21647259.2023.2219119

DO - 10.1080/21647259.2023.2219119

M3 - Journal article

VL - 11

SP - 381

EP - 402

JO - Peacebuilding

JF - Peacebuilding

SN - 2164-7259

IS - 4

ER -