Rebel Cities: From The Right To The City To The... May 2026

From the Right to the City to Urban Revolution - Paramjit Singh, 2014

: The book transitions from the "right to the city" toward a more radical "urban revolution." Harvey suggests that revolutionary focus should shift from the traditional factory floor to the city streets and the "precariat" class. Rebel Cities: From the Right to the City to the...

: He highlights how social movements like Occupy Wall Street and the London Riots represent attempts to reclaim the "urban commons"—spaces and resources that should be managed for public benefit rather than private profit. From the Right to the City to Urban

In his influential 2012 book, , David Harvey argues that the city is the primary site for anti-capitalist resistance. He builds on Henri Lefebvre's 1968 concept of the "right to the city"—not just as a right to access what exists, but as a collective power to fundamentally reshape urban life and the urbanization process. Key Themes & Features He builds on Henri Lefebvre's 1968 concept of

: Harvey illustrates how capitalism uses urbanization as a tool to absorb surplus capital, often leading to "accumulation by dispossession" where the poor are displaced to make way for high-value development.