References
Agadjanian, V. (2002a) ‘Competition and cooperation among working women in the context of structural adjustment: the case of street vendors in La Paz-El Alto, Bolivia’, Contributions to Asian Studies, 18(2–3), 259–85.
Agadjanian, V. (2002b) ‘Men doing “women’s work”: masculinity and gender relations among street vendors in Maputo, Mozambique’, The Journal of Men’s Studies, 10(3), 329–42.
Amankwaa, E. F. (2017) ‘Women and men at the traffic lights: the (re)configuration and (re)gendering of street water vending in Ghana’, GeoJournal, 82(2), 329–44.
Anjaria, J. S. (2011) ‘Ordinary states: everyday corruption and the politics of space in Mumbai’, American Ethnologist, 38(1), 58–72.
Baldino, D. and Goold, J. (2014) ‘Iran and the emergence of information and communications technology: the evolution of revolution?’, Australian Journal of International Affairs, 68(1), 17–35.
Batréau, Q. and Bonnet, F. (2016) ‘Managed informality: regulating street vendors in Bangkok’, City and Community, 15(1), 29–43.
Bayat, A. (1997a) Street politics: poor people’s movements in Iran, New York, Columbia University Press.
Bayat, A. (1997b) ‘Un-civil society: the politics of the “informal people”’, Third World Quarterly, 18(1), 53–72.
Bayat, A. (2000) ‘From dangerous classes to quiet rebels’ politics of the urban subaltern in the global South’, International Sociology, 15(3), 533–57.
Bayat, A. (2013) Life as politics: how ordinary people change the Middle East, Palo Alto, Stanford University Press.
BBC Persian (2016) ‘Beating a female vendor in Fooman: the municipality apologised’, 19 November 2016, www.bbc.com/persian/iran-38037043 (accessed 10 September 2017).
Bénit-Gbaffou, C. (2016) ‘Do street traders have the “right to the city”? The politics of street trader organisations in inner city Johannesburg, post-Operation Clean Sweep’, Third World Quarterly, 37(6), 1102–29.
Bénit-Gbaffou, C. and Oldfield, S. (2011) ‘Accessing the state: everyday practices and politics in cities of the South’, Journal of Asian and African Studies, 46(5), 445–52.
Benjamin, S. (2004) ‘Urban land transformation for pro-poor economies’, Geoforum, 35(2), 177–87.
Boonjubun, C. (2017) ‘Conflicts over streets: the eviction of Bangkok street vendors’, Cities, 70, 22–31.
Chiu, C. (2013) ‘Informal management, interactive performance: street vendors and police in a Taipei night market’, International Development Planning Review, 35(4), 335–52.
Crossa, V. (2009) ‘Resisting the entrepreneurial city: street vendors’ struggle in Mexico City’s historic center’, International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, 33(1), 43–63.
Crossa, V. (2013) ‘Play for protest, protest for play: artisan and vendors’ resistance to displacement in Mexico City’, Antipode, 45(4), 826–43.
Crossa, V. (2016) ‘Reading for difference on the street: de-homogenising street vending in Mexico City’, Urban Studies, 53(2), 287–301.
Das, V. (2007) Life and words: violence and the descent into the ordinary, Berkeley, University of California Press.
Das, V. and Poole, D. (2004) ‘Anthropology in the margins of the state’, PoLAR: Political and Legal Anthropology Review, 30(1), 140–44.
Dikeç, M. (2005) ‘Space, politics, and the political’, Environment and Planning D: Society and Space, 23(2), 171–88.
Dikeç, M. (2011) Badlands of the republic: space, politics and urban policy, Vol. 78, Malden, MA, Wiley-Blackwell.
Dikeç, M. (2012) ‘Space as a mode of political thinking’, Geoforum, 43(4), 669–76.
Ehsani, K. (2014) ‘The production and politics of public space radical democratic politics and public space’, International Journal of Middle East Studies, 46(1), 159–62.
Eidse, N., Turner, S. and Oswin, N. (2016) ‘Contesting street spaces in a socialist city: itinerant vending-scapes and the everyday politics of mobility in Hanoi, Vietnam’, Annals of the American Association of Geographers, 106(2), 340–49.
Entekhab (2014) ‘The explanations of Ghalibaf (Mayor of Tehran) about the death of a street vendor’, (in Farsi), 23 July 2014, http://www.entekhab.ir/fa/news/177094 (accessed 10 September 2017).
Fadaee, S. and Schindler, S. (2017) ‘Women hawkers in Tehran’s metro: everyday politics and the production of public space’, International Development Planning Review, 39(1), 57–75.
Fuller, C. J. and Harriss, J. (2000) ‘For an anthropology of the state in India’, in C. J. Fuller and V. Benei (eds) The everyday state and society in modern India, New Delhi, Social Science Press, 1–30.
Hackenbroch, K. and Hossain, S. (2012) ‘The organised encroachment of the powerful: everyday practices of public space and water supply in Dhaka, Bangladesh’, Planning Theory and Practice, 13(3), 397–420.
Hanser, A. (2016) ‘Street politics: street vendors and urban governance in China’, The China Quarterly, 226, 363–82.
Huang, G., Xue, D. and Li, Z. (2014) ‘From revanchism to ambivalence: the changing politics of street vending in Guangzhou’, Antipode, 46(1), 170–89.
IRNA (Islamic Republic News Agency) (2017) ‘Self-immolation of three people in the country due to the violence of municipal officials’, (in Farsi), 21 April 2017, http://www.irna.ir/fa/News/82510229, (accessed 10 November 2017).
ISNA (Iranian Students’ News Agency) (2013) ‘Narratives of metro vendors about the death of a young man’, (in Farsi), 21 January 2014, https://www.isna.ir/news/92110201722, (accessed 10 November 2017).
Iveson, K. (2014) ‘Policing the city’, in M. Davidson and D. Martin (eds) Urban politics: critical approaches, Los Angeles, Sage, 85–99.
Kamete, A. Y. (2010) ‘Defending illicit livelihoods: youth resistance in Harare’s contested spaces’, International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, 34(1), 55–75.
Khatam, A. and Haas, O. (2018) ‘Interrupting planetary urbanization: a view from Middle Eastern cities’, Environment and Planning D: Society and Space, 36(3), 439–55.
Kinyanjui, M. N. (2014) Women and the informal economy in urban Africa: from the margins to the centre, London, Zed Books.
Kudva, N. (2009) ‘The everyday and the episodic: the spatial and political impacts of urban informality’, Environment and planning A, 41(7), 1614–28.
Maneepong, C. and Walsh, J. C. (2013) ‘A new generation of Bangkok street vendors: economic crisis as opportunity and threat’, Cities, 34, 37–43.
Martínez, L., Short, J. R. and Estrada, D. (2018) ‘The diversity of the street vending: a case study of street vending in Cali’, Cities, 79, 18–25.
Milgram, B. L. (2013) ‘Taking the street into the market: the politics of space and work in Baguio City, Philippines’, in K. T. Hansen, W. E. Little and B. L. Milgram (eds) Street economies in the urban global South, Santa Fe, SAR Press, 71–92.
Milgram, B. L. (2014) ‘Remapping the edge: informality and legality in the Harrison road night market, Baguio City, Philippines’, City and Society, 26(2), 153–74.
Palacios, R. (2016) ‘The new identities of street vendors in Santiago, Chile’, Space and Culture, 19(4), 421–34.
Polese, A., Rekhviashvili, L. and Morris, J. (2016) ‘Informal governance in urban spaces: power, negotiation and resistance among Georgian street vendors’, Geography Research Forum, 36, 15–32.
Rancière, J. (1999) Disagreement: politics and philosophy, Minneapolis, University of Minnesota Press.
Rancière, J. (2004) ‘Introducing disagreement’, Angelaki, 9(3), 3–9.
Rancière, J. (2009) ‘The method of equality: an answer to some questions’, in G. Rockhill and P. Watts (eds) Jacques Rancière: history,politics, aesthetics, Durham, NC, Duke University Press, 273–88.
Roever, S. and Skinner, C. (2016) ‘Street vendors and cities’, Environment and Urbanization, 28(2), 359–74.
Rouhani, F. (2003) ‘“Islamic yuppies”? State rescaling, citizenship, and public opinion formation in Tehran, Iran’, Urban Geography, 24(2), 169–82.
Roy, A. (2011) ‘Slumdog cities: rethinking subaltern urbanism’, International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, 35(2), 223–38.
Rubin, M. (2011) ‘Perceptions of corruption in the South African housing allocation and delivery programme: what it may mean for accessing the state’, Journal of Asian and African Studies, 46(5), 479–90.
Saghafi, M. (2015) Stationary street vendors in Tehran: research and recommendations, (in Farsi), Tehran, Ministry of Cooperatives Labour and Social Welfare.
Schindler, S. (2014) ‘Producing and contesting the formal/informal divide: regulating street hawking in Delhi, India’, Urban Studies, 51(12), 2596–612.
Swanson, K. (2007) ‘Revanchist urbanism heads south: the regulation of indigenous beggars and street vendors in Ecuador’, Antipode, 39(4), 708–28.
Swyngedouw, E. (2009) ‘The antinomies of the postpolitical city: in search of a democratic politics of environmental production’, International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, 33(3), 601–20.
Turner, S. and Schoenberger, L. (2012) ‘Street vendor livelihoods and everyday politics in Hanoi, Vietnam: the seeds of a diverse economy?’, Urban Studies, 49(5), 1027–44.
Agadjanian, V. (2002a) ‘Competition and cooperation among working women in the context of structural adjustment: the case of street vendors in La Paz-El Alto, Bolivia’, Contributions to Asian Studies, 18(2–3), 259–85.
Agadjanian, V. (2002b) ‘Men doing “women’s work”: masculinity and gender relations among street vendors in Maputo, Mozambique’, The Journal of Men’s Studies, 10(3), 329–42.
Amankwaa, E. F. (2017) ‘Women and men at the traffic lights: the (re)configuration and (re)gendering of street water vending in Ghana’, GeoJournal, 82(2), 329–44.
Anjaria, J. S. (2011) ‘Ordinary states: everyday corruption and the politics of space in Mumbai’, American Ethnologist, 38(1), 58–72.
Baldino, D. and Goold, J. (2014) ‘Iran and the emergence of information and communications technology: the evolution of revolution?’, Australian Journal of International Affairs, 68(1), 17–35.
Batréau, Q. and Bonnet, F. (2016) ‘Managed informality: regulating street vendors in Bangkok’, City and Community, 15(1), 29–43.
Bayat, A. (1997a) Street politics: poor people’s movements in Iran, New York, Columbia University Press.
Bayat, A. (1997b) ‘Un-civil society: the politics of the “informal people”’, Third World Quarterly, 18(1), 53–72.
Bayat, A. (2000) ‘From dangerous classes to quiet rebels’ politics of the urban subaltern in the global South’, International Sociology, 15(3), 533–57.
Bayat, A. (2013) Life as politics: how ordinary people change the Middle East, Palo Alto, Stanford University Press.
BBC Persian (2016) ‘Beating a female vendor in Fooman: the municipality apologised’, 19 November 2016, www.bbc.com/persian/iran-38037043 (accessed 10 September 2017).
Bénit-Gbaffou, C. (2016) ‘Do street traders have the “right to the city”? The politics of street trader organisations in inner city Johannesburg, post-Operation Clean Sweep’, Third World Quarterly, 37(6), 1102–29.
Bénit-Gbaffou, C. and Oldfield, S. (2011) ‘Accessing the state: everyday practices and politics in cities of the South’, Journal of Asian and African Studies, 46(5), 445–52.
Benjamin, S. (2004) ‘Urban land transformation for pro-poor economies’, Geoforum, 35(2), 177–87.
Boonjubun, C. (2017) ‘Conflicts over streets: the eviction of Bangkok street vendors’, Cities, 70, 22–31.
Chiu, C. (2013) ‘Informal management, interactive performance: street vendors and police in a Taipei night market’, International Development Planning Review, 35(4), 335–52.
Crossa, V. (2009) ‘Resisting the entrepreneurial city: street vendors’ struggle in Mexico City’s historic center’, International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, 33(1), 43–63.
Crossa, V. (2013) ‘Play for protest, protest for play: artisan and vendors’ resistance to displacement in Mexico City’, Antipode, 45(4), 826–43.
Crossa, V. (2016) ‘Reading for difference on the street: de-homogenising street vending in Mexico City’, Urban Studies, 53(2), 287–301.
Das, V. (2007) Life and words: violence and the descent into the ordinary, Berkeley, University of California Press.
Das, V. and Poole, D. (2004) ‘Anthropology in the margins of the state’, PoLAR: Political and Legal Anthropology Review, 30(1), 140–44.
Dikeç, M. (2005) ‘Space, politics, and the political’, Environment and Planning D: Society and Space, 23(2), 171–88.
Dikeç, M. (2011) Badlands of the republic: space, politics and urban policy, Vol. 78, Malden, MA, Wiley-Blackwell.
Dikeç, M. (2012) ‘Space as a mode of political thinking’, Geoforum, 43(4), 669–76.
Ehsani, K. (2014) ‘The production and politics of public space radical democratic politics and public space’, International Journal of Middle East Studies, 46(1), 159–62.
Eidse, N., Turner, S. and Oswin, N. (2016) ‘Contesting street spaces in a socialist city: itinerant vending-scapes and the everyday politics of mobility in Hanoi, Vietnam’, Annals of the American Association of Geographers, 106(2), 340–49.
Entekhab (2014) ‘The explanations of Ghalibaf (Mayor of Tehran) about the death of a street vendor’, (in Farsi), 23 July 2014, http://www.entekhab.ir/fa/news/177094 (accessed 10 September 2017).
Fadaee, S. and Schindler, S. (2017) ‘Women hawkers in Tehran’s metro: everyday politics and the production of public space’, International Development Planning Review, 39(1), 57–75.
Fuller, C. J. and Harriss, J. (2000) ‘For an anthropology of the state in India’, in C. J. Fuller and V. Benei (eds) The everyday state and society in modern India, New Delhi, Social Science Press, 1–30.
Hackenbroch, K. and Hossain, S. (2012) ‘The organised encroachment of the powerful: everyday practices of public space and water supply in Dhaka, Bangladesh’, Planning Theory and Practice, 13(3), 397–420.
Hanser, A. (2016) ‘Street politics: street vendors and urban governance in China’, The China Quarterly, 226, 363–82.
Huang, G., Xue, D. and Li, Z. (2014) ‘From revanchism to ambivalence: the changing politics of street vending in Guangzhou’, Antipode, 46(1), 170–89.
IRNA (Islamic Republic News Agency) (2017) ‘Self-immolation of three people in the country due to the violence of municipal officials’, (in Farsi), 21 April 2017, http://www.irna.ir/fa/News/82510229, (accessed 10 November 2017).
ISNA (Iranian Students’ News Agency) (2013) ‘Narratives of metro vendors about the death of a young man’, (in Farsi), 21 January 2014, https://www.isna.ir/news/92110201722, (accessed 10 November 2017).
Iveson, K. (2014) ‘Policing the city’, in M. Davidson and D. Martin (eds) Urban politics: critical approaches, Los Angeles, Sage, 85–99.
Kamete, A. Y. (2010) ‘Defending illicit livelihoods: youth resistance in Harare’s contested spaces’, International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, 34(1), 55–75.
Khatam, A. and Haas, O. (2018) ‘Interrupting planetary urbanization: a view from Middle Eastern cities’, Environment and Planning D: Society and Space, 36(3), 439–55.
Kinyanjui, M. N. (2014) Women and the informal economy in urban Africa: from the margins to the centre, London, Zed Books.
Kudva, N. (2009) ‘The everyday and the episodic: the spatial and political impacts of urban informality’, Environment and planning A, 41(7), 1614–28.
Maneepong, C. and Walsh, J. C. (2013) ‘A new generation of Bangkok street vendors: economic crisis as opportunity and threat’, Cities, 34, 37–43.
Martínez, L., Short, J. R. and Estrada, D. (2018) ‘The diversity of the street vending: a case study of street vending in Cali’, Cities, 79, 18–25.
Milgram, B. L. (2013) ‘Taking the street into the market: the politics of space and work in Baguio City, Philippines’, in K. T. Hansen, W. E. Little and B. L. Milgram (eds) Street economies in the urban global South, Santa Fe, SAR Press, 71–92.
Milgram, B. L. (2014) ‘Remapping the edge: informality and legality in the Harrison road night market, Baguio City, Philippines’, City and Society, 26(2), 153–74.
Palacios, R. (2016) ‘The new identities of street vendors in Santiago, Chile’, Space and Culture, 19(4), 421–34.
Polese, A., Rekhviashvili, L. and Morris, J. (2016) ‘Informal governance in urban spaces: power, negotiation and resistance among Georgian street vendors’, Geography Research Forum, 36, 15–32.
Rancière, J. (1999) Disagreement: politics and philosophy, Minneapolis, University of Minnesota Press.
Rancière, J. (2004) ‘Introducing disagreement’, Angelaki, 9(3), 3–9.
Rancière, J. (2009) ‘The method of equality: an answer to some questions’, in G. Rockhill and P. Watts (eds) Jacques Rancière: history,politics, aesthetics, Durham, NC, Duke University Press, 273–88.
Roever, S. and Skinner, C. (2016) ‘Street vendors and cities’, Environment and Urbanization, 28(2), 359–74.
Rouhani, F. (2003) ‘“Islamic yuppies”? State rescaling, citizenship, and public opinion formation in Tehran, Iran’, Urban Geography, 24(2), 169–82.
Roy, A. (2011) ‘Slumdog cities: rethinking subaltern urbanism’, International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, 35(2), 223–38.
Rubin, M. (2011) ‘Perceptions of corruption in the South African housing allocation and delivery programme: what it may mean for accessing the state’, Journal of Asian and African Studies, 46(5), 479–90.
Saghafi, M. (2015) Stationary street vendors in Tehran: research and recommendations, (in Farsi), Tehran, Ministry of Cooperatives Labour and Social Welfare.
Schindler, S. (2014) ‘Producing and contesting the formal/informal divide: regulating street hawking in Delhi, India’, Urban Studies, 51(12), 2596–612.
Swanson, K. (2007) ‘Revanchist urbanism heads south: the regulation of indigenous beggars and street vendors in Ecuador’, Antipode, 39(4), 708–28.
Swyngedouw, E. (2009) ‘The antinomies of the postpolitical city: in search of a democratic politics of environmental production’, International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, 33(3), 601–20.
Turner, S. and Schoenberger, L. (2012) ‘Street vendor livelihoods and everyday politics in Hanoi, Vietnam: the seeds of a diverse economy?’, Urban Studies, 49(5), 1027–44.