Village Buildings bibliography: Difference between revisions

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*___. [?] "Walter Segal: Community Architect." Walter Segal Self Build Trust, http://www.segalselfbuild.co.uk/news/waltersegalbycol.html [accessed 15 February 2010].<br /> &nbsp;
*___. [?] ''Autonomy, Solidarity, Possibility: The Colin Ward Reader''. Edited by Damian F. White and Chris Wilbert.&nbsp;<br /> &nbsp;
*Ward, Peter (1999). ''Colonias and Public Policy in Texas and Mexico: Urbanization by Stealth.''&nbsp;(Austin: University of Texas Press, 1999).<br /> ["describes how a two-tier system of housing regulations was gradually codified by the state in Mexico, leading to the legitimization of sub-optimal informal housing for the poor."].<br /> &nbsp;
*Ward, Peter, ed. (1982). ''Self-Help Housing: A Critique.'' <br /> &nbsp;
*Ward, Peter (2012). "Self-Help Housing Ideas and Practice in the Americas. "In book: ''Planning Ideas That Matter: Livability, Territoriality, Governance and Reflective Practice''. Chapter: Chapter 11. Publisher: MIT Press, Editors: Bish Sanyal, Lawrence Vale, Christina Rosen, pp.283-310. https://www.researchgate.net/publication/277589974_Self-Help_Housing_Ideas_and_Practice_in_the_Americas.<br /> &nbsp;
*Ward, P., and G. C. Macoloo (1992). "Articulation theory and self-help housing practice in the 1990s." ''Urban Studies'' 16 (1): 60-80. https://drive.google.com/open?id=1xe68jbph5H1MkFNrlklWjEcGeJcWMRO9.<blockquote>''Abstract<br /> "Explores the proposition that many aspects of self-help housing practices are being undermined by the penetration of capital accumulation processes at the urban periphery of Third World cities. Specifically, the authors investigate the ways in which different modes of housing production may be articulated - economically, politically and ideologically. Drawing upon evidence in two principal locations (Mexico and Kenya), they analyse the methods and costs of land acquisition by low-income groups, and the production and consumption of building materials for self-help construction. The authors conclude by identifying ways to restore a dialogue between those academics interested primarily in critical theory and housing production, and those researchers and practitioners who are more concerned with policy formulation and implementation."'' &nbsp;</blockquote>