Lorena Melgaco is an urban scholar with a background in architecture and urbanism. Her research focuses on the forms of micropolitical agency within a global political structure of knowledge and technological production and its relation to the production of space, especially in the postcolony. She is interested in, among other things, the entwinement of digital technology and the production of space; the intersections of technological dependency, capitalist production of space and the socio-environmental crisis, and the challenges of planning education and practice from a socio-spatial justice perspective.
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Preface Acknowledgements Chapter 1: The Emergence of the Connected Rurban: An Introduction to the Process of Socio-Technological Peripheralization Part 1: Developing An Appropriate Lens To Look At The Connected Rurban: A Multilevel Approach Chapter 2: Setting The Context Chapter 3: Peripherality And The Everyday Of The Rurban: Rethinking Methodology Part 2: An Introduction To The Everyday: On People, Places And The Internet Chapter 4: Santo Antonio do Salto Chapter 5: Pendeen Chapter 6: Noiva do Cordeiro Part 3: From The Global To The Everyday And Back Again: Bottom-Bottom Tactics As Means To Social Transformation? Chapter 7: Understanding Multilevel Peripherality In The Connected Rurban Chapter 8. A Conclusion, Or The Opening For Another Conversation: For An Open Theory Of The Connected Rurban References Index About the Author