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Abahlali baseMjondolo assembly The Poor People's Alliance outside the Constitutional Court in Johannesburg in 2009. Several popular movements, such as the shack dwellers' movement Abahlali baseMjondolo in South Africa, [11] the Right to the City Alliance in the United States, [12] Recht auf Stadt, [13] a network of squatters, tenants and artists in Hamburg, and various movements in Asia and ...
The right to the city is a concept coined by Henri Lefebvre in his 1968 book Le Droit à la ville.Lefebvre has an idea of space that encompasses perceived space, conceived space, and lived space. [2]
M. Milet, La Faculté de droit de Paris face à la vie politique : de l'affaire Scelle à l'affaire Jèze, 1925–1936, LGDJ, 1996 G. Jèze, L'influence de Léon Duguit sur le droit administratif français, in Archives de philosophie du droit, 1932, p. 135-151
The Meaning of the City is a theological essay by Jacques Ellul which recounts the story of the city in the Bible and seeks to explain the city's biblical significance.. Ellul wrote the book in 1951; it was published in English translation in 1970, and then in French in 1975 as Sans feu ni lieu : Signification biblique de la Grande Ville.
Mathieu Marraud, De la Ville à l'État. La Bourgeoisie parisienne -XVIIe et XVIIIe siècles, Paris, Albin Michel, coll. « Bibliothèque Histoire », 2009, 552p. ISBN 978-2-226-18707-9. Mathieu Marraud, La Noblesse de Paris au XVIIIe siècle, Paris, Le Seuil, 2000, 576 p. ISBN 978-2020372107.
Val-de-Travers (8) Val-de-Ruz (10) Le Locle (10) La Chaux-de-Fonds (27). The enabling legislation of the cantons does require communes to have a conseil général with legislative powers, of 15 to 41 members, based on the size of the commune.
Ville is a French word meaning "city" or "town", but its meaning in the Middle Ages was "farm" (from Gallo-Romance VILLA < Latin villa rustica) and then "village". The derivative suffix -ville is commonly used in names of cities, towns and villages , particularly throughout France, Canada and the United States.
Jean Fourastié (French pronunciation: [ʒɑ̃ fuʁastje]; 15 April 1907 – 25 July 1990) was a French civil servant, economist, professor and public intellectual.He coined the expression Trente Glorieuses ("the glorious thirty [years]") to describe the period of prosperity that France experienced from the end of World War II until the 1973 oil crisis.