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Edited by Marilyn McShane and Frank P. Williams III
   

   
Street People and the Contested Realms of Public Space
   

Randall Amster

       
   

Amster explores America's changing attitude toward public space and its effect on street people.

Amster studies the social and spatial implications of homelessness in America. Increasingly, commentators have lamented the erosion of public space, charting its decline along with the rise of commercialization and privatization. A result is the criminalization of homelessness, a phenomenon revealed here through participant observations, informal conversations, and in-depth interviews with street people, city officials, and social service providers. Amster explores the interconnections among: (i) the impetus of development and gentrification; (ii) the enactment of anti-homeless ordinances and regulations; (iii) the material and ideological erosion of public space; (iv) emerging forces of resistance to these trends; and (v) the continuing viability of anti-systemic movements.

       
  Randall Amster , Professor of Peace Studies at Prescott College in northern Arizona, holds a J.D. from Brooklyn Law School and a Ph.D. in Justice Studies from Arizona State University. He is the co-editor of Lives in the Balance: Perspectives on Global Injustice and Inequality (Brill 1997), and has published articles in journals including Social Justice, Peace Review, and Contemporary Justice Review.
       
    x, 236 pages. Index, bibliography. ISBN 1-59332-066-3.
$65. Published.