1.
Hall, S. Un‐settling ‘the heritage’, re‐imagining the post‐nationWhose heritage? Third Text 13, 3–13 (1999).
2.
Hebbert, M. Londoners. in London: more by fortune than design 161–180 (John Wiley, 1998).
3.
Nicolas, B. & Colthorpe, T. London identities.
4.
World Heritage Centre. UNESCO World Heritage Centre - Document - New life for historic cities: The historic urban landscape approach explained.
5.
Michael Keith. Postcolonial London and the Allure of the Cosmopolitan City. AA Files (2003).
6.
Glass, R. & University College, London. Centre for Urban Studies. Newcomers: the West Indians in London. vol. no.1 (Centre for Urban Studies; Allen & Unwin, 1960).
7.
Selvon, S. & Nasta, S. The Lonely Londoners. (Penguin Books, 2006).
8.
Pablo, Mateos. London’s Population. in Imagining the Future City: London 2062 (eds. Bell, S. & Paskins, J.) (Ubiquity Press, 2013). doi:10.5334/bag.
9.
Shepherd et al., J. Population structure and immigrant groups. in A social atlas of London 48–57 (Clarendon Press, 1974).
10.
Jennifer Robinson. Making London, through other cities. in Imagining the Future City: London 2062 (eds. Bell, S. & Paskins, J.) 23–25 (Ubiquity Press, 2013). doi:10.5334/bag.
11.
Hall, P. London’s growth. in London 2001 29–49 (Unwin Hyman, 1989).
12.
Tribillon, J. London is the place for me. in 3–45.
13.
Shepherd, J., Westaway, J. & Lee, T. A social atlas of London. (Clarendon Press, 1974).
14.
Jacobs, J. M. Edge of empire: postcolonialism and the city. (Routledge, 1996).
15.
Hall, S. City, street and citizen: the measure of the ordinary, Introduction and chapter 2. vol. 9 (Routledge, 2012).
16.
Robson, G. Class, Criminality and Embodied Consciousness: Charlie Richardson and a South East London Habitus.
17.
Ahmed, S. On being included: racism and diversity in institutional life. (Duke University Press, 2012).
18.
Crenshaw, K. Mapping the Margins: Intersectionality, Identity Politics, and Violence against Women of Color. Stanford Law Review 43, (1991).
19.
Wall, E. Chapter 3 Making and taking Elephant and Castle. in From Masterplans to Daily Actions: London Public Spaces as Designed, Reconfigured and Used 95–136 (University of London, 2018).
20.
Campkin, B. Remaking London: decline and regeneration in urban culture. vol. 19 (I.B. Tauris, 2013).
21.
Collins, M. The likes of us: a biography of the white working class. (Granta, 2005).
22.
Collins, M. Jerusalem’s dead. in The likes of us: a biography of the white working class 200–211 (Granta, 2004).
23.
Collins, M. The white man’s burden. in The likes of us: a biography of the white working class 221–234 (Granta, 2004).
24.
Rendell, J. ‘Arry’s Bar: condensing and displacing on the Aylesbury Estate. The Journal of Architecture 22, 532–554 (2017).
25.
Lees, L. The Urban Injustices of New Labour’s "New Urban Renewal”: The Case of the Aylesbury Estate in London. Antipode 46, 921–947 (2014).
26.
Campkin, B. Out-of-sync estates. in Mobilising housing histories: learning from London’s past (eds. Guillery, P. & Kroll, D.) (RIBA Publishing, 2017).
27.
Fisher, Tracy. Race, Neoliberalism, and ‘Welfare Reform’ in Britain. Social Justice 33, 54–65 (2006).
28.
Sassen, S. The Global City: Introducing a Concept.
29.
Glass, R. Introduction. in London: aspects of change vol. no.3 (Macgibbon and Kee, 1964).
30.
Glass, R. London: aspects of change. in Clichés of urban doom and other essays 133–158 (Basil Blackwell, 1989).
31.
Young, M. D. & Willmott, P. Family and kinship in east London. (Penguin, 2007).
32.
Young, M. D. & Willmott, P. Chapter 6: The family in the economy. in Family and kinship in East London 68–80 (Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1986).
33.
Young, M. D. & Willmott, P. Chapter 7: Kinship and community. in Family and kinship in East London 81–93 (Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1986).
34.
Edwards, M. & el Mutale, E. Monitoring and Evaluation of the work of the King’s Cross Partnership: Final report.
35.
Buchanan, C. & Crowther, G. The form of urban areas. in Traffic in towns: a study of the long term problems of traffic in urban areas 29–32 (H.M.S.O., 1963).
36.
Buchanan, C. & Crowther, G. Part four: a central metropolitan block. in Traffic in towns: a study of the long term problems of traffic in urban areas 124–163 (H.M.S.O., 1963).
37.
Melhuish, C. Concrete as conduit of experience at the Brunswick, London. in Material Matters | Architecture and Material Practice | Taylor & Francis Group 199–208.
38.
Kendall, E. Babylon comes to Bloomsbury. Guardian 33–34 (1973).
39.
Jolly, E. Here and There: The Story of the Bangladeshi Community in Camden. https://www.emmajolly.co.uk/blog/tag/camden-council-2/ (2011).
40.
Dench, G., Gavron, K. & Young, M. Chapter 2: Settlement of the Bangladeshis. in The new East End: kinship, race and conflict 33–51 (Profile, 2006).
41.
Melhuish, C. Chapter 1 : A brief history of the Brunswick and Chapter 4: Inside looking out: the residents’ story. in The Life & Times of the Brunswick, Bloomsbury (Camden History Society, 2006).
42.
Houlbrook, M. Sexual difference and Britishness. in Queer London: perils and pleasures in the sexual metropolis, 1918-1957 221–240 (University of Chicago Press, 2005).
43.
Castiglia, C. & Reed, C. For time Immemorial: Marking Time in the Built Environment. in If memory serves: gay men, AIDS, and the promise of the queer past 73–112 (University of Minnesota Press, 2012).
44.
GLC Story Oral History Project.
45.
Ritu, D. The Only One. Urban Pamphleteer | LGBTQ  Night-time Spaces: Past, Present & Future 5–7.
46.
Brown, G. Cosmopolitan Camouflage: (post-)gay space in Spitalfields. in Cosmopolitan urbanism 130–145 (Routledge, 2006).
47.
Campkin, Ben; Marshall, Laura. London’s nocturnal queer geographies: Why have London’s LGBTQ  nightlife venues been closing and what is at stake when they are lost? Soundings: A journal of politics and culture 70, 82–96.
48.
Chisholm, D. Introduction.: Sodom and Gomorrah in the Era of Late Capitalism; or, A Return to Walter Benjamin. in 1–62 (University of Minnesota Press).
49.
QSN | Queer Spaces Network. Vision For Queer Cultural Spaces in London (2017).
50.
Doan, P. L. & Higgins, H. The Demise of Queer Space? Resurgent Gentrification and the Assimilation of LGBT Neighborhoods. Journal of Planning Education and Research 31, 6–25 (2011).
51.
Oswin, N. Critical geographies and the uses of sexuality: deconstructing queer space. Progress in Human Geography 32, 89–103 (2008).
52.
Power, L. No bath but plenty of bubbles: an oral history of the Gay Liberation Front, 1970-73. (Cassell, 1995).
53.
Schulman, S. The Gentrification of AIDS. in The gentrification of the mind: witness to a lost imagination 36–52 (University of California Press, 2012).
54.
Andersson, J. Homonormative aesthetics: AIDS and ‘de-generational unremembering’ in 1990s London. Urban Studies (2018) doi:10.1177/0042098018806149.
55.
Bressey, C. & Romain, G. Claude McKay: Queering Spaces of Black Radicalism in Interwar London. in Sex, Time and Place : Queer Histories of London, c. 1850 to the Present (Bloomsbury Academic, 2016). doi:10.5040/9781474235006.ch-008.
56.
Millington, G. Chp 4, Agonopolis: the multicultural city (post-war immigration in London). in ‘Race’, culture and the right to the city: centres, peripheries and margins 79–103 (Palgrave Macmillan, 2011).
57.
Goodwin, P. & Oduroe, J. Re-visioning Black Urbanism and the production of space. in Critical cities: ideas, knowledge and agitation from emerging urbanists 126–137 (Myrdle Court Press, 2009).
58.
Gilory, P. The black Atlantic as a counter-culture of modernity. in The black Atlantic: modernity and double consciousness 1–40 (Harvard University Press, 1993).
59.
Glass, R. Problems of settlement and adjustment. in Newcomers: the West Indians in London (Chp III) vol. no.1 44–92 (Centre for Urban Studies; Allen & Unwin, 1960).
60.
Melhuish, C. Case Study 5, A cooperative community-led development in inner London.
61.
Harrison, R. Heritage, diversity and human rights. in Heritage: critical approaches 140–165 (Routledge, 2013).
62.
Community consultation on the future of Somerleyton Road: a report of Social Life’s work in Brixton in early 2013.
63.
Low, S. M. The Anthropology of Cities: Imagining and Theorizing the City. Annual Review of Anthropology 25, 383–409 (1996).
64.
Barton, S. Gentrification: how do we define it and who cares anyway? https://www.opendemocracy.net/opensecurity/sam-barton/gentrification-how-do-we-define-it-and-who-cares-anyway (2014).
65.
Anchor & Magnet. anchor-and-magnet | Social heritage record. CHRON. http://www.anchorandmagnet.org/blank-k2lup (2014).
66.
Phil Cohen. Our Kind of Town (2). Livingmaps Review (2017).
67.
Campkin, B. & Duijzings, G. Engaged urbanism: situated and experimental methodologies for fairer cities. in Engaged Urbanism : Cities and Methodologies 1–20 (I. B. Tauris & Company, Limited, 2016).
68.
Whyatt, A. London East: Gateway to regeneration. in Rising in the East?: the regeneration of East London 265–287 (Lawrence & Wishart, 1996).
69.
Mintchev, N. & Moore, H. L. Super-diversity and the prosperous society. European Journal of Social Theory 21, 117–134 (2018).
70.
London 2012 and the post-Olympics city: a hollow legacy? (Palgrave Macmillan, 2017).
71.
Melhuish, C. & Campkin, B. Cultural infrastructure around the Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park: mapping survey and report. (2017).
72.
Powell, H. & Marrero-Guillamón, I. The art of dissent: adventures in London’s Olympic state. (Marshgate Press, 2012).
73.
Raco, M. & Kesten, J. The politicisation of diversity planning in a global city: Lessons from London. Urban Studies 55, 891–916 (2018).
74.
Davies, M., Davis, J., Rapp, D., & Historic England. Dispersal: picturing urban change in east London. (Historic England, 2017).
75.
Corner, J. "The Agency of Mapping: Speculation, Critique and Invention. in Mappings 213–252 (Reaktion, 2002).
76.
Rose, G. Researching visual materials: towards a critical visual methodology. in Visual methodologies: an introduction to the interpretation of visual materials 5–32 (Sage, 2001).
77.
Kacel, E. Framing Migrants as City-dwellers: Identity, Space, and Photography. in Migration, Stadt und Urbanität : Perspektiven auf die Heterogenität migrantischer Lebenswelten (Springer VS, 2017).
78.
Campkin, B., Mogilevich, M. & Ross, R. Picturing Place: The Agency of Images in Urban Change. in Engaged Urbanism : Cities and Methodologies (I. B. Tauris & Company, Limited, 2016).
79.
Ahmed, S. Introduction. in Living a feminist life 1–18 (Duke University Press, 2017).
80.
Back, L. ‘Our area’: community, resistance and multiculture. in New ethnicities and urban culture: racisms and multiculture in young lives vol. 2 101–122 (UCL Press, 1996).
81.
Joan W. Scott. The Evidence of Experience. Critical Inquiry 17, (1991).
82.
Hall, P. Voices from the London streets. in London voices, London lives: tales from a working capital 3–11 (Policy Press, 2007).
83.
Hall, P. London voices, London lives: tales from a working capital. (Policy Press, 2007).
84.
Hall, P. Melting the pot. in London voices, London lives: tales from a working capital 407–438 (Policy Press, 2007).
85.
Brown, TimAndrews, Gavin J.Cummins, StevenGreenhough, BethLewis, DanielPower, Andrew. Health Geographies : A Critical Introduction. (Wiley-Blackwell).
86.
Connors Jackman, M. Chapter 7 The Trouble with Fieldwork: Queering Methodologies. in Queer methods and methodologies: intersecting queer theories and social science research (Ashgate, 2010).
87.
Terkel, Studs, 1912-2008. Hard times: an oral history of the great depression. (1970).