BerkePRCampanellaTJ (2006) Planning for Post-disaster Resiliency. Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science604: 192–207.
2.
BernerE (2001) Informal developers, patrons, and the state: Institutions and regulatory mechanisms in popular housing. In: Paper presented at the Naerus Conference ESF/N-AERUS Workshop on “Coping with informality and illegality in human settlements in developing cities,”Leuven, 23–26 May.
BurgessR (1985) Problems in the classification of low income neighborhoods in Latin America. Third World Planning Review7(4): 286–306.
5.
BurgessR (1982) Self-help housing advocacy: A curious form of radicalism. A critique of the work of John Turner. In: WardP (ed.) Self-Help Housing: A Critique. London; Bronx, NY: Mansell Publishing, 17–55.
6.
CampbellEH (2006) Urban refugees in Nairobi: Problems of protection, mechanisms of survival, and possibilities for integration. Journal of Refugee Studies19(3): 396–413.
7.
CohenMMarchJOlsenJ (1972) A garbage can model of organizational choice. Administrative Science Quarterly17(1): 1–25.
8.
DarlingJ (2016) Forced migration and the city: Irregularity, informality, and the politics of presence. Progress in Human Geography. Epub ahead of print 10February. DOI: 10.1177/0309132516629004.
9.
DavisD (2005) Reverberations: Mexico city’s 1985 earthquake and the transformation of the capital. In: ValeLCampanellaT (eds) The Resilient City, How Modern Cities Recover from Disaster. Cambridge, MA: The MIT Press, 255–280.
10.
DavoudiS (2012) Resilience: Challenges for planning theory and practice. Planning Theory & Practice13(2): 299–333.
11.
De SotoH (2000) The Mystery of Capital: Why Capitalism Triumphs in the West and Fails Everywhere Else. New York: Basic Books.
12.
Durand-LasserveA (1998) Law and urban change in developing countries: Trends and issues. In: FernandesEVarleyA (eds) Illegal Cities. London: Zed Books, 233–257.
FahmiWS (2005) The impact of privatization of solid waste management on the Zabaleen garbage collectors of Cairo. Environment and Urbanization17(2): 155–170.
15.
FawazM (2009a) Contracts and retaliation: Securing housing exchanges in the interstice of the formal/informal Beirut (Lebanon) housing market. Journal of Planning Education and Research29(1): 90–107.
16.
FawazM (2009b) Neoliberal urbanity and the right to the city: A view from Beirut’s periphery. Development and Change40(5): 827–852.
17.
FernandesEVarleyA (eds) (1998) Illegal Cities: Law and Urban Change in Developing Countries. London: Zed Books.
18.
FekadeW (2000) Deficits of formal urban land management and informal responses under rapid urban growth, an international perspective. Habitat International24: 127–150.
19.
GrabskaK (2006) Marginalization in urban spaces of the global south: Urban refugees in Cairo. Journal of Refugee Studies19(3): 287–307.
20.
JacobsenK (2006) Refugees and Asylum seekers in urban areas: A livelihoods perspective. Journal of Refugee Studies19(3): 273–286.
21.
JonesGWardP (1998) Privatizing the commons: Reforming the ejido and urban development in Mexico. International Journal of Urban and Regional Research22(1): 76–93.
22.
KeivaniRWernaE (2001) Refocusing the housing debate in developing countries from a pluralist perspective. Habitat International25: 191–208.
23.
KibreabG (2007) Why Governments Prefer Spatially Segregated Settlement Sites for Urban Refugees. Refuge: Canada’s Periodical on Refugees24(1): 27–35.
24.
KirondeJML (2000) Understanding land markets in African urban areas: The case of Dar es Salaam, Tanzania. Habitat International24: 151–165.
25.
KoenisbergerO (1986) Third world housing policies since the 1950s. Habitat International10(3): 27–32.
26.
KombeWKreibichV (2000) Reconciling informal and formal land management: An agenda for improving tenure security and urban governance in poor Countries. Habitat International24: 231–240.
27.
McFarlaneC (2012) Rethinking informality: Politics, crisis, and the city. Planning Theory & Practice13(1): 89–108.
28.
MiraftabF (2004) Neoliberalism and casualization of public sector services: The case of waste collection services in Cape Town, South Africa. International Journal of Urban and Regional Research28(4): 874–892.
29.
NelsonMEhrenfeuchtRShirleyL (2007) Planning, Plans and People: Professional Expertise, Local Knowledge, and Governmental Action in Post-Hurricane Katrina New Orleans. Cityscape9(3): 23–52.
30.
ParthasarathyD (2015) Informality, resilience, and the political implications of disaster governance. Pacific Affairs88(3): 551–575.
31.
PeattieL (1968) The View from the Barrio. Ann Arbor, MI: University of Michigan Press.
32.
SeeligerLTurokI (2014) Averting a downward spiral: Building resilience in informal urban settlements through adaptive governance. Environment and Urbanization26(1): 184–199.
33.
SimoneA (2004) People as infrastructure: Intersecting fragments in Johannesburg. Public Culture16(3): 407–429.
34.
SmithH (2003) Housing networks in San José, Costa Rica. Habitat International27: 83–105.
35.
TurnerJFC (1972) Housing as a verb. In: TurnerJFisherR (eds) Freedom to Build: Dweller Control of the Housing Process. New York: MacMillan Publishers.
36.
TurnerJFC (1968) Housing priorities, settlement patterns, and urban development in modernizing countries. Journal of the American Institute of Planners: 354–363.
37.
United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) and UN-Habitat (2014) Housing, Land and Property Issues in Lebanon: Implications of the Syrian Refugee Crisis. Beirut: UN.
38.
United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) (2014) Vulnerability Assessment of Syrian Refugees (VASyR) in Lebanon. Beirut: UNHCR
39.
ValeLCampanellaT (eds) (2005) The Resilient City, How Modern Cities Recover from Disaster. Cambridge, MA: The MIT Press.
40.
Van der LindenJ (1994) Where do we go from here?Third World Planning Review16(3): 223–228.