ChantSHPedwellC (2008) Women, Gender and the Informal Economy: An Assessment of ILO Research and Suggested Ways Forward. Geneva: ILO.
2.
ChatterjeeP (2004) The Politics of the Governed: Reflections on Popular Politics in Most of the World. New York, NY: Columbia University Press.
3.
ChenM (2001) Women and informality: A global picture, the global movement. Sais Review21(1): 71–82.
4.
KabeerN (2008) Mainstreaming Gender in Social Protection for the Informal Economy. London: Commonwealth Secretariat.
5.
LataLNPeterWSoniaR (2021) The politics of gendered space: Social norms and purdah affecting female informal work in Dhaka, Bangladesh. Gender, Work & Organization28(1): 318–336.
6.
LefebvreH (1991) The Production of Space. Oxford: Blackwell.
7.
MondalL (2024) The urban logic of dispossession and nomadism in neoliberal Bangladesh. International Journal of Comparative Sociology. Epub ahead of print 26 July 2024. DOI: 10.1177/00207152241261973.
8.
WhiteSC (2017) Patriarchal investments: Marriage, dowry and the political economy of development in Bangladesh. Journal of Contemporary Asia47(2): 247–272.
9.
YiftachelO (2009a) Critical theory and ‘gray space’: Mobilization of the colonized. City13(2–3): 246–263.
10.
YiftachelO (2009b) Theoretical notes on ‘gray cities’: The coming of urban apartheid?Planning Theory8(1): 88–100.