Urban Regeneration, Community Power, and the (in)significance of 'race'

Front Cover
Ashgate, 2004 - Political Science - 216 pages
By linking pluralist theory with an ethnographic methodology, this book describes the nature and extent of 'community power' and the significance of race and ethnicity within local urban regeneration partnerships. In doing so it contributes to an understanding of contemporary urban regeneration policy by challenging orthodox standpoints on community participation and race and ethnicity issues in Britain.

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