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    <titleInfo>
      <title>Secured residential enclaves in the Delhi region : impact of indigenous and transnational models</title>
    </titleInfo>
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      <namePart type="given">Véronique</namePart>
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    <abstract>This paper examines the development of secured residential enclaves in India, especially in Delhi. It expounds the conditions of their emergence and success: although gated communities are a market driven development boosted by economic liberalisation reforms, they are also embedded in indigenous traditions of residential segregation and enclosure as well as colonial practices. The Non-Resident Indians (NRI) have further played a significant role in the production of these new residential spaces. Significant appeal factors are explored: desire for security, retreat from failing government and the polluted city, search for exclusivity, elitism and social homogeneity. Tapping into the Indian diaspora market and the middle-class' aspirations for social status, promoters have projected their residential enclaves as a way of "global living" in a healthy environment, reserved to a privileged cosmopolitan elite. Yet, gated communities in Delhi are not a mere exogenous Western production; rather, they are spaces in-between the global and the local. The findings are based on direct field observations in Delhi and a review of advertisements by real estate developers in various media. The analysis pursues an Indo-Chinese comparative perspective with reference to the research of Marie Sander (this issue) on gated communities in Shanghai.</abstract>
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    <subject authority="local">
      <geographic>INDE</geographic>
      <geographic>DELHI</geographic>
    </subject>
    <classification authority="local">102</classification>
    <classification authority="local">106</classification>
    <classification authority="local">108</classification>
    <relatedItem type="host">
      <titleInfo type="alternative" displayLabel="Titre du numéro">
        <title>"Mind the gap" : thinking about in-between spaces in Delhi and Shanghai</title>
      </titleInfo>
      <name type="personnal">
        <namePart type="family">Brosius</namePart>
        <namePart type="given">C.</namePart>
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          <roleTerm type="text">ed.</roleTerm>
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        </role>
        <affiliation>IRD</affiliation>
      </name>
      <name type="personnal">
        <namePart type="family">Schilbach</namePart>
        <namePart type="given">T.</namePart>
        <role>
          <roleTerm type="text">ed.</roleTerm>
          <roleTerm type="code" authority="marcrelator">edt</roleTerm>
        </role>
        <affiliation>IRD</affiliation>
      </name>
      <titleInfo>
        <title>City, Culture and Society</title>
      </titleInfo>
      <part>
        <detail type="volume">
          <number>7</number>
        </detail>
        <detail type="volume">
          <number>4</number>
        </detail>
        <extent unit="pages">
          <list> 227-236</list>
        </extent>
      </part>
      <originInfo>
        <dateIssued>2016</dateIssued>
      </originInfo>
      <identifier type="issn">1877-9166</identifier>
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    <identifier type="uri">https://www.documentation.ird.fr/hor/fdi:010067423</identifier>
    <identifier type="doi">10.1016/j.ccs.2015.03.004</identifier>
    <identifier type="issn">1877-9166</identifier>
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      <recordCreationDate encoding="w3cdtf">2017-01-20</recordCreationDate>
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