Front cover image for Local protest, global movements : capital, community, and state in San Francisco

Local protest, global movements : capital, community, and state in San Francisco

Karl Beitel (Author)
A history of the antigentrification and housing rights movement in San Francisco, this book examines the ability of local urban movements to engage in meaningful contestation with private real estate capital and area governmental leaders in the era of urban neoliberalism. Using San Francisco as a case study, the author analyzes the innovative ways urban social movements have organized around issues regarding land use, housing, urban ecology, and health care on the local level to understand the changing nature of protest formation around the world. Reconciling the passing of New Left Ideals and the emergence of mobilization on a global scale, he assesses the limits of contemporary urban movements as conduits for advancing a radical political program. The author argues these limits reflect recurrent problems of internal fragmentation, and the manner in which liberal democratic institutions structure processes of political participation and interest representation

eBook, English, 2013
Temple University Press, Philadelphia, 2013