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Stolen Cars


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       Gabriel Feltran (ed.)

      Professor at the Department of Sociology at Federal University of São Carlos. Senior Researcher at the Brazilian Centre for Analysis and Planning (Cebrap). Author of The Entangled City: Crime as Urban Fabric in São Paulo, Manchester University Press 2020.

       [email protected]

       Luana Motta

      Professor at the Department of Sociology at Federal University of São Carlos. Coordinator of Namargem – Centre for Urban Research.

       [email protected]

       Deborah Fromm

      PhD Candidate in Social Anthropology at University of Campinas and researcher at the Centre for Urban Ethnographies (Neu/Cebrap).

       [email protected]

       Janaina Maldonado

      PhD Candidate at Hamburg University in the LFF Graduate Programme “Democratising security in turbulent times” and Doctoral researcher at German Institute of Global and Area Studies.

       [email protected]

       André de Pieri Pimentel

      PhD Candidate in Social Sciences at University of Campinas and researcher at Namargem – Centre for Urban Research.

       [email protected]

       Isabela Vianna Pinho

      PhD Candidate in Sociology at Federal University of Sao Carlos and researcher at Namargem – Centre for Urban Research.

       [email protected]

       Gregório Zambon

      PhD Candidate in Social Sciences at University of Campinas and researcher at Namargem – Centre for Urban Research.

       [email protected]

       Luiz Gustavo Simão Pereira

      Undergraduate student of Social Sciences at Federal University of São Carlos and researcher at Namargem – Centre for Urban Research.

       [email protected]

       Juliana Alcântara

      Undergraduate student of Social Sciences at Federal University of São Carlos and researcher at Namargem – Centre for Urban Research.

       [email protected]

       Lucas Alves Fernandes Silva

      Bachelor in Social Sciences from the Federal University of São Carlos.

       [email protected]

       Daniel Veloso Hirata

      Professor at the Department of Sociology and Methodology in Social Sciences at Fluminense Federal University. Coordinator of the Centre for the Study of New Illegalisms (Geni).

       IJURR Studies in Urban and Social Change Book Series

      The IJURR Studies in Urban and Social Change Book Series shares IJURR’s commitments to critical, global, and politically relevant analyses of our urban worlds. Books in this series bring forward innovative theoretical approaches and present rigorous empirical work, deepening understandings of urbanization processes, but also advancing critical insights in support of political action and change. The Book Series Editors appreciate the theoretically eclectic nature of the field of urban studies. It is a strength that we embrace and encourage. The Editors are particularly interested in the following issues:

       Comparative urbanism

       Diversity, difference and neighborhood change

       Environmental sustainability

       Financialization and gentrification

       Governance and politics

       International migration

       Inequalities

       Urban and environmental movements

      The series is explicitly interdisciplinary; the Editors judge books by their contribution to the field of critical urban studies rather than according to disciplinary origin. We are committed to publishing studies with themes and formats that reflect the many different voices and practices in the field of urban studies. Proposals may be submitted to Editor in Chief, Walter Nicholls ([email protected]), and further information about the series can be found at www.ijurr.org.

      Walter Nicholls

       Manuel Aalbers

       Talja Blokland

       Dorothee Brantz

       Patrick Le Galès

       Jenny Robinson

       Gabriel Feltran

      It’s November 2015. A white Suzuki Jimny moves slowly through the streets of Vila Mariana, a middle-class neighborhood in southwestern São Paulo. Inside, three researchers talk about the best way to get to Vila Cisper, an old working-class neighborhood in the East Zone. Vila Cisper was settled in the 1950s after a glass bottle factory was set up there. The factory belonged to Olavo Egydio de Souza Aranha Jr., scion of a family from the Portuguese nobility, who studied engineering and architecture in Europe. His employees were migrants from the Brazilian countryside, descendants of Christianized Indians or blacks freed from slavery, or even poor whites, especially Italians, who had come to São Paulo as beneficiaries of Government