Exploring the idea of participation beyond formal recognition such as residency and citizenship, the paper critically reflects on the right-to-the-city debate's key concept of inhabitance. |
The Distance from the inhabitance is about seventy miles, as we conceave by our Journeys. |
The mountain, still showing the last vestiges of human inhabitance just the night before, exploded in a shower of dust. |
But that was a bit strange, there was no sign of male inhabitance. |
She was leading the mare through the trees, searching as usual for a good tree to climb and those evasive signs of inhabitance when the horse stopped. |
Furthermore, most of the relevant studies apply definitions of the right to the city that are based on urban inhabitance. |