“Bibliography” in “High Stakes, High Hopes”
Askins, K. 2018. “Feminist geographies and participatory action research: Co-producing narratives with people and place.” Gender, Place and Culture, 25,9: 1277–1294.
Autonomous Geographies Collective. 2010. “Beyond scholar activism: Making strategic interventions inside and outside the neoliberal university.” ACME: An International E-Journal for Critical Geographies, 9,2: 245–275.
Ballard, R. 2015. “Geographies of development III: Militancy, insurgency, encroachment and development by the poor.” Progress in Human Geography, 39,2: 214–224.
Bénit-Gbaffou, C., ed. 2015. Popular Politics in South African Cities: Unpacking Community Participation. Pretoria: Human Sciences Research Council Press.
Bénit-Gbaffou, C., S. Charlton, S. Didier, and K. Dörmann. 2019. Politics and Community-Based Research: Perspectives from Yeoville Studio, Johannesburg. Johannesburg: Wits University Press.
Bhan, G. 2019. “Notes on a Southern urban practice.” Environment and Urbanization, 31,2: 639–654.
Bhan, G., S. Srinivas, and V. Watson, eds. 2018. The Routledge Companion to Planning in the Global South. London: Routledge.
Bruinders, S. 2006. “‘This is our sport!’ Christmas band competitions and the enactment of an ideal community.” SAMUS: South African Music Studies, 26,1: 110–126.
Bruinders, S. 2010. “Parading respectability: The Christmas Bands Movement in the Western Cape, South Africa and the constitution of subjectivity.” African Music: Journal of the International Library of African Music, 8,4: 69–83.
Bruinders, S. 2017. Parading Respectability: The Cultural and Moral Aesthetics of the Christmas Bands Movement in the Western Cape, South Africa. Grahamstown: African Humanities Programme.
Bunge, W. 2011. Fitzgerald: Geography of a Revolution. Athens: University of Georgia Press.
Chari, S., and H. Donner. 2010. “Ethnographies of activism: A critical introduction.” Cultural Dynamics, 22: 75–85.
Charlton, S. 2009. “Housing for the nation, the city and the household: Competing rationalities as a constraint to reform?” Development Southern Africa, 26,2: 301–315.
Charlton, S. 2018. “Spanning the spectrum: Infrastructural experiences in South Africa’s state housing programme.” International Development Planning Review, 40,2: 97–120.
Choi, S., A. Selmeczi, and E. Strausz. 2020. Critical Methods for the Study of World Politics: Creativity and Transformation. London: Routledge.
Cirolia, L. R., T. Görgens, M. van Donk, W. Smit and S. Drimie, eds. 2017. Upgrading Informal Settlements in South Africa: Pursuing a Partnership-Based Approach. Cape Town: Juta.
City of Cape Town. 2020. State of Cape Town Report 2020. Visual Summary of the Full Report. Policy and Strategy Department: Cape Town. https://resource.capetown.gov.za/documentcentre/Documents/City%20research%20reports%20and%20review/State_of_Cape_Town_2020_Visual_Summary.pdf.
Comaroff, J., and J. L. Comaroff. 2012. Theory from the South: Or, How Euro-America Is Evolving toward Africa. London: Routledge.
Connell, R. 2007. Southern Theory: The Global Dynamics of Knowledge in Social Science. Malden, Mass.: Polity.
Cresswell, T. 2021. “Beyond geopoetics: For hybrid texts.” Dialogues in Human Geography, 11,1: 36–39.
Crush, J., and A. Chikanda, eds. 2015. Mean Streets: Migration, Xenophobia and Informality in South Africa. Waterloo: Southern African Migration Programme.
Dasgupta, S., and N. Wahby. 2021. “Introduction: Beyond a standardised urban lexicon: Which vocabulary matters?” International Development Planning Review, 43,4: 419–433.
Dauphinee, E. 2010. “The ethics of autoethnography.” Review of International Studies, 36,3: 799–818.
Dauphinee, E. 2013a. The Politics of Exile. London: Routledge.
Dauphinee, E. 2013b. “Writing as hope: Reflections on The Politics of Exile.” Security Dialogue, 44,4: 347–361.
Dickens, L., and T. Edensor. 2022. “Dreamlands: Stories of enchantment and excess in a search for lost sensations.” Cultural Geographies, 29,1: 23–43.
Dierwechter, Y. 2004. “Dreams, bricks, and bodies: Mapping ‘neglected spatialities’ in African Cape Town.” Environment and Planning A: Economy and Space, 36,6: 959–981.
Favish, J., and J. McMillan. 2009. “The university and social responsiveness in the curriculum: A new form of scholarship.” London Review of Education, 7,2: 169–179.
Fuller, D. 2008. “Public geographies: Taking stock.” Progress in Human Geography, 32,6: 1–11.
Gaulier, A., and D. C. Martin. 2017. Cape Town Harmonies: Memory, Humour and Resilience. Cape Town: African Minds.
Huchzermeyer, M. 2001. “Housing for the poor? Negotiated housing policy in South Africa.” Habitat International, 25,3: 303–331.
Inayatullah, N., ed. 2011. Autobiographical International Relations: I, IR. London: Routledge.
Inayatullah, N. 2013. “Pulling threads: Intimate systematicity in The Politics of Exile.” Security Dialogue, 44,4: 319–348.
James, D. 2012. “Money-go-round: Personal economies of wealth, aspiration and indebtedness.” Africa, 82,1: 20–40.
Jeppie, S. 1990. “Popular culture and carnival in Cape Town: The 1940s and 1950s.” In The Struggle for District Six Past and Present, edited by S. Jeppie and C. Soudien, 67–87. Cape Town: Buchu Books.
Katz, C. 2017. “Revisiting minor theory.” Environment and Planning D: Society and Space, 35,4: 596–599.
Kindon, S., and S. Elwood. 2009. “Introduction: More than methods—Reflections on participatory action research in geographic teaching, learning and research.” Journal of Geography in Higher Education, 33,1: 19–32.
Lalu, P. 2012. “Still searching for the ‘human’.” Social Dynamics, 38,1: 3–7.
Landau, L. B. 2012. Exorcising the Demons Within: Xenophobia, Violence and Statecraft in Contemporary South Africa. Johannesburg: Wits University Press.
Leitner, H., J. Peck, and E. Sheppard. 2007. Contesting Neoliberalism: Urban Frontiers. London: Guilford Press.
Lemanski, C., and S. Oldfield. 2009. “The parallel claims of gated communities and land invasions in a Southern city: Polarised state responses.” Environment and Planning A, 41,3: 634–648.
Levenson, Z. 2018. “The road to TRAs is paved with good intentions: Dispossession through delivery in post-apartheid Cape Town.” Urban Studies, 55,14: 3218–3233.
Levenson, Z. 2021. “Becoming a population: Seeing the state, being seen by the state, and the politics of eviction in Cape Town.” Qualitative Sociology, 367–383.
Levenson, Z. 2022. Delivery as Dispossession: Land Occupation and Eviction in the Post-Apartheid City. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Lorimer, H., and H. Parr. 2014. “Excursions—Telling stories and journeys.” Cultural Geographies, 21,4: 543–547.
Mabin, A. 1984. “WEJGE: The genesis of an exploration in geographical learning.” South African Geographer, 12,1: 69–79.
Martin, D. 1999. Coon Carnival: New Year in Cape Town, Past to Present. Cape Town: David Philip.
Mason, W. 2021. “On staying: Extended temporalities, relationships and practices in community engaged scholarship.” Qualitative Research, 0,0:1–20.
McFarlane, C. 2011. Learning the City: Knowledge and Translocal Assemblage. Hoboken, N.J.: John Wiley & Sons.
Miller, C. 2007. “‘Julle kan ma New York toe gaan, ek bly in die Manenberg’: An oral history of jazz in Cape Town from the mid-1950s to the mid-1970s.” In Imagining the City: Memories and Cultures in Cape Town, edited by S. Field, R. Meyer, and F. Swanson, 133–149. Cape Town: Human Sciences Research Council Press.
Millstein, M. 2020. “‘If I had my house, I’d feel free’: Housing and the (re)productions of citizenship in Cape Town, South Africa.” Urban Forum, 31,3: 289–309.
Miraftab, F. 2004. “Invited and invented spaces of participation: Neoliberal citizenship and feminists’ expanded notion of politics.” Wagadu, 1,1: 1–7.
Miraftab, F. 2009. “Insurgent planning: Situating radical planning in the global south.” Planning Theory, 8,1: 32–50.
Mitchell, K. 2008. Practising Public Scholarship: Experiences and Possibilities beyond the Academy. Oxford: Wiley-Blackwell.
Mrs Kinpaisby. 2008. “Taking stock of participatory geographies: Envisioning the communiversity.” Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers, 33,3: 292–299.
Nagar, R. 2002. “Footloose researchers, ‘traveling’ theories, and the politics of transnational feminist praxis.” Gender, Place and Culture, 9,2: 179–186.
Nagar, R. 2012. “Storytelling and co-authorship in feminist alliance work: Reflections from a journey.” Gender, Place and Culture, 20,1: 1–18.
Nagar, R. 2014. Muddying the Waters: Coauthoring Feminisms across Scholarship and Activism. Champaign: University of Illinois Press.
Nagar, R. 2019. Hungry Translations: Relearning the World through Radical Vulnerability. Champaign: University of Illinois Press.
Ngwenya, N., and L. R. Cirolia. 2021. “Conflicts between and within: The ‘conflicting rationalities’ of informal occupation in South Africa.” Planning Theory and Practice, 22,1: 1–16.
Nyamnjoh, F. 2012. “Potted plants in green houses: A critical reflection on the resilience of colonial education.” Journal of Asian and African Studies, 47,2: 129–154.
Oldfield, S. 2008a. “Who’s serving whom? Partners, processes and products in service-learning projects in South Africa.” Journal of Geography in Higher Education, 32,2: 269–285.
Oldfield, S. 2008b. “Teaching through service-learning projects in urban geography courses at the University of Cape Town.” In Service-Learning in the Disciplines: Lessons from the Field. Higher Education Quality Committee / JET Education Services. Pretoria: Council on Higher Education.
Oldfield, S. 2015. “Between the academy and activism: The urban as political terrain.” Urban Studies, 52,11: 2072–2086.
Oldfield, S., and S. Greyling. 2015. “Waiting for the state: A politics of housing in South Africa.” Environment and Planning A, 47,5: 1100–1112.
Oldfield, S., S. Parnell, and A. Mabin. 2004. “Engagement and reconstruction in critical research: Negotiating urban practice, policy and theory in South Africa.” Journal of Social and Cultural Geography, 5,2: 285–300.
Oldfield, S., and Z. Patel. 2016. “Engaging geographies: Negotiating positionality and building relevance.” South African Geographical Journal, 98,3: 505–514.
Oldfield, S., and K. Stokke. 2006. “Building unity in diversity: Social movement activism in the Western Cape Anti-Eviction Campaign.” In Globalisation, Marginalisation and New Social Movements, edited by A. Habib, I. Valodia, and R. Ballard, 25–49. Durban: University of KwaZulu-Natal Press.
Oswin, N., and G. Pratt. 2021. “Critical urban theory in the ‘Urban Age’: Ruptures, tensions, and messy solidarities.” International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, 45,4: 585–596.
Parnell, S. 2007. “The academic-policy interface in post-apartheid urban research: Personal reflections.” South African Geographical Journal, 89,2: 111–120.
Peake, L. 2016. “The twenty-first century quest for feminism and the global urban.” International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, 40,1: 219–227.
Pieterse, E. 2014. “Epistemological practices of southern urbanism.” Paper presented for the African Centre for Cities Seminar Series. Cape Town: African Centre for Cities, University of Cape Town. https://www.africancentreforcities.net/wp-content/uploads/2014/02/Epistemic-practices-of-southern-urbanism-Feb-2014.pdf.
Pratt, G. 2012. Families Apart: Migrant Mothers and the Conflicts of Labor and Love. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.
Richardson, L. 2020. “Writing: A method of inquiry.” In Handbook of Qualitative Research, edited by N. Denzin and Y. Lincoln, 923–948. Thousand Oaks, Calif.: Sage.
Robinson, J., and A. Roy. 2016. “Debate on global urbanisms and the nature of urban theory.” International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, 40,1: 181–186.
Rogerson, C. M. 1996. “Urban poverty and the informal economy in South Africa’s economic heartland.” Environment and Urbanization, 8,1: 167–179.
Routledge, P., and K. D. Derickson. 2015. “Situated solidarities and the practice of scholar-activism.” Environment and Planning D: Society and Space, 33,3: 391–407.
Roy, A. 2020. “‘The shadow of her wings’: Respectability politics and the self-narration of geography.” Dialogues in Human Geography, 10,1: 19–22.
Salo, E. 2004. “Negotiating gender and personhood in the new South Africa: Adolescent women and gangsters in Manenberg township on the Cape Flats.” European Journal of Cultural Studies, 6,3: 345–365.
Salo, E. 2018. Respectable Mothers, Tough Men and Good Daughters: Producing Persons in Manenberg Township. Bamenda: Langaa Research and Publishing Common Initiative Group.
Sandercock, L. 2003. “Out of the closet: The importance of stories and storytelling in planning practice.” Planning Theory and Practice, 4,1: 11–28.
Sangtin Writers and R. Nagar. 2006. Playing with Fire: Feminist Thought and Activism through Seven Lives in India. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.
Saville, S. M. 2021. “Towards humble geographies.” Area, 53,1: 97–105.
Scott, D. 2014. “The temporality of generations: Dialogue, tradition, criticism.” New Literary History, 45,2: 157–181.
Seekings, J. 2011. “The changing faces of urban civic organisation.” Transformation: Critical Perspectives on Southern Africa, 75,1: 140–161.
Selmeczi, A. 2012. “Abahlali’s vocal politics of proximity: Speaking, suffering and political subjectivization.” Journal of Asian and African Studies, 47,5: 498–515.
Selmeczi, A. 2014. “Dis/placing political illiteracy: The politics of intellectual equality in a South African shack dwellers’ movement.” Interface: Journal for and about Social Movements, 6,1: 230–265.
Shannon, J., K. B. Hankins, T. Shelton, A. J. Bosse, D. Scott, D. Block, H. Fischer, L. E. Eaves, J. Jung, J. Robinson, P. Solís, H. Pearsall, A. Rees and A. Nicolas. 2020. “Community geography: Toward a disciplinary framework.” Progress in Human Geography, 45,5: 1147–1168.
Sitas, A. 2004. Voices That Reason: Theoretical Parables. Leiden: Brill Academic Publishers.
Skinner, C. 2008. “The struggle for the streets: Processes of exclusion and inclusion of street traders in Durban, South Africa.” Development Southern Africa, 25,2: 227–242.
Swarr, A., and R. Nagar. 2010. Critical Transnational Feminist Praxis. Albany: State University of New York Press.
Tuck, E. 2009. “Suspending damage: A letter to communities.” Harvard Educational Review, 79,3: 409–428.
Tuck, E., M. Smith, A. M. Guess, T. Benjamin, and B. K. Jones. 2014. “Geotheorizing Black/land: Contestations and contingent collaborations.” Departures in Critical Qualitative Research, 3,1: 52–74.
Tuck, E., and K. W. Yang. 2012. “Decolonization is not a metaphor.” Decolonization: Indigeneity, Education & Society, 1,1: 1–40.
Tuck, E., and K. W. Yang. 2014. “R-words: Refusing research.” In Humanizing Research: Decolonizing Qualitative Inquiry with Youth and Communities, edited by D. Paris and M. T. Winn, 223–248. Thousand Oaks, Calif.: Sage.
Visagie, J., and I. Turok. 2021. “Driven further apart by the pandemic? Contrasting impacts of COVID-19 on people and places.” National Income Dynamics Study (NIDS)—Coronavirus Rapid Mobile Survey (CRAM). https://cramsurvey.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/07/12.-Turok-I.-_-Visagie-J.-2021-Drive-apart_-Contrasting-impacts-of-COVID-19-on-people-and-places.pdf.
Winkler, T. 2013. “At the coalface: Community-university engagements and planning education.” Journal of Planning Education and Research, 33,2: 215–227.
We use cookies to analyze our traffic. Please decide if you are willing to accept cookies from our website. You can change this setting anytime in Privacy Settings.