1.
Usher, M. Veins of Concrete, Cities of Flow: Reasserting the Centrality of Circulation in Foucault’s Analytics of Government. Mobilities 9, 550–569 (2014).
2.
Desai, R. The Politics of Open Defecation: Informality, Body, and Infrastructure in Mumbai. Antipode 47, 98–120 (2015).
3.
Gandy, M. Learning From Lagos. New Left Review 33, (2005).
4.
Graham, S. FlowCity: Networked Mobilities and the Contemporary Metropolis. Journal of Urban Technology 9, 1–20 (2002).
5.
Graham, S. & Marvin, S. Splintering Urbanism: Networked Infrastructures, Technological Mobilities and the Urban Condition. (Routledge, 2001).
6.
Graham, S. & Marvin, S. Splintering Urbanism: Networked Infrastructures, Technological Mobilities and the Urban Condition. (Routledge, 2001).
7.
Kaika, M. & Swyngedouw, E. Fetishizing the Modern City: The Phantasmagoria of Urban Technological Networks. International Journal of Urban and Regional Research 24, 120–138 (2000).
8.
McFarlane, C. Sanitation in Mumbai’s Informal Settlements: State, ‘Slum’, and Infrastructure. Environment and Planning A 40, 88–107 (2008).
9.
Merriman, P. Driving Places. Theory, Culture & Society 21, 145–167 (2004).
10.
Silver, J. Disrupted Infrastructures: An Urban Political Ecology of Interrupted Electricity in Accra. International Journal of Urban and Regional Research 39, 984–1003 (2015).
11.
Bulkeley, H. Low-carbon Transitions and the Reconfiguration of Urban Infrastructure. Urban Studies 51, 1471–1486 (2014).
12.
Gandy, M. Water, Sanitation and the Modern City: Colonial and Post-Colonial Experiences in Lagos and Mumbai. (2006).
13.
Graham, S. Disrupted Cities: When Infrastructure Fails. (Routledge, 2010).
14.
Graham, S. Disrupted Cities: When Infrastructure Fails. (Routledge, 2010).
15.
McFarlane, C. Informal Urban Sanitation: Everyday Life, Poverty, and Comparison. Annals of the Association of American Geographers 104, 989–1011 (2014).
16.
Niedzielski, M. A. & Malecki, E. J. Making Tracks: Rail Networks in World Cities. Annals of the Association of American Geographers 102, 1409–1431 (2012).
17.
Nikolaeva, A. Designing Public Space for Mobility: Contestation, Negotiation and Experiment at Amsterdam Airport Schiphol. Tijdschrift voor economische en sociale geografie 103, 542–554 (2012).
18.
Roy, A. Urban Informality: Toward an Epistemology of Planning. Journal of the American Planning Association 71, 147–158 (2005).
19.
Silver, J. Incremental Infrastructures: Material Improvisation and Social Collaboration Across Post-Colonial Accra. Urban Geography 35, 788–804 (2014).
20.
Swanson, M. W. The Sanitation Syndrome: Bubonic Plague and Urban Native Policy in the Cape Colony, 1900-1909. The Journal of African HistoryThe Great CircleAfrica TodayJournal of Southern African Studies 18, 387–410 (1977).
21.
Young, D. & Keil, R. Reconnecting the Disconnected: The Politics of Infrastructure in the In-Between City. Cities 27, 87–95 (2010).
22.
Zérah, M.-H. Splintering Urbanism in Mumbai: Contrasting Trends in a Multilayered Society. Geoforum 39, 1922–1932 (2008).
23.
Zerah, M.-H. Participatory Governance in Urban Management and the Shifting Geometry of Power in Mumbai. Development and Change 40, 853–877 (2009).
24.
Charney, I. & Rosen, G. Splintering Skylines in a Fractured City: High-Rise Geographies in Jerusalem. Environment and Planning D: Society and Space 32, 1088–1101 (2014).
25.
Graham, S. & Hewitt, L. Getting Off the Ground. Progress in Human Geography 37, 72–92 (2013).
26.
Graham, S. Vertical: The City From Satellites to Bunkers. (Verso, 2016).
27.
Harris, A. Vertical Urbanisms. Progress in Human Geography 39, 601–620 (2015).
28.
Jacobs, J. M. & Cairns, S. Ecologies of Dwelling: Maintaining High‐Rise Housing in Singapore. in The New Blackwell Companion to the City 79–95 (Wiley-Blackwell, 2011).
29.
Jacobs, J. M. & Cairns, S. Ecologies of Dwelling: Maintaining High‐Rise Housing in Singapore. in The New Blackwell Companion to the City 79–95 (Wiley-Blackwell, 2011).
30.
McNeill, D. Skyscraper Geography. Progress in Human Geography 29, 41–55 (2005).
31.
Adey, P. Introduction: Air-Target: Distance, Reach and the Politics of Verticality. Theory, Culture & Society 28, 173–187 (2011).
32.
Adey, P. Vertical Security in the Megacity. Theory, Culture & Society 27, 51–67 (2010).
33.
Baxter, R. The High-Rise Home: Verticality as Practice in London. International Journal of Urban and Regional Research 41, 334–352 (2017).
34.
Bondi, L. Gender Symbols and Urban Landscapes. Progress in Human Geography 16, 157–170 (1992).
35.
Crampton, J. W. Assemblage of the Vertical: Commercial Drones and Algorithmic Life. Geographica Helvetica 71, 137–146 (2016).
36.
Elden, S. Secure the Volume: Vertical Geopolitics and the Depth of Power. Political Geography 34, 35–51 (2013).
37.
Garrett, B. L. Picturing Urban Subterranea: Embodied Aesthetics of London’s Sewers. Environment and Planning A 48, 1948–1966 (2016).
38.
Garrett, B. L. Undertaking Recreational Trespass: Urban Exploration and Infiltration. Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers 39, 1–13 (2014).
39.
Garrett, B. L. Urban Explorers: Quests for Myth, Mystery and Meaning. Geography Compass 4, 1448–1461 (2010).
40.
Garrett, B. L. Explore Everything: Place-Hacking the City. (Verso, 2013).
41.
Gilbert, D. The Three Ages of Aerial Vision: London’s Aerial Iconography From Wenceslaus Hollar to Google Earth. The London Journal 35, 289–299 (2010).
42.
Graham, S. Super-tall and Ultra-deep: The Cultural Politics of the Elevator. Theory, Culture & Society 31, 239–265 (2014).
43.
Graham, S. Vanity and Violence. City 20, 755–771 (2016).
44.
Hewitt, L. & Graham, S. Vertical Cities: Representations of Urban Verticality in 20th-Century Science Fiction Literature. Urban Studies 52, 923–937 (2015).
45.
Harker, C. The Only Way Is Up? Ordinary Topologies of Ramallah. International Journal of Urban and Regional Research 38, 318–335 (2014).
46.
Hinchcliffe, T. & Deriu, D. Introduction Eyes over London: Re-Imagining the Metropolis in the Age of Aerial Vision. The London Journal 35, 221–224 (2010).
47.
Jacobs, J. M. A Geography of Big Things. Cultural Geographies 13, 1–27 (2006).
48.
Jacobs, J. M. ‘A Tall Storey ... But, a Fact Just the Same’: The Red Road High-Rise as a Black Box. Urban Studies 44, 609–629 (2007).
49.
Jensen, O. B. Drone City – Power, Design and Aerial Mobility in  the Age of "Smart Cities”. Geographica Helvetica 71, 67–75 (2016).
50.
Johnston, C. On Not Falling. Performance Research 18, 30–35 (2013).
51.
Leshem, N. "Over Our Dead Bodies”: Placing Necropolitical Activism. Political Geography 45, 34–44 (2015).
52.
Mackay, R. ‘Going Backwards in Time to Talk about the Present’: Man On a Wire and Verticality after 9/11. Comparative American Studies An International Journal 9, 3–20 (2011).
53.
Muntean, L. Men on Wire. (2007).
54.
Nam, S. Phnom Penh’s Vertical Turn. City 21, 622–631 (2017).
55.
Nethercote, M. & Horne, R. Ordinary Vertical Urbanisms: City Apartments and the Everyday Geographies of High-Rise Families. Environment and Planning A 48, 1581–1598 (2016).
56.
Rosen, G. & Charney, I. Divided We Rise: Politics, Architecture and Vertical Cityscapes at Opposite Ends of Jerusalem. Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers 41, 163–174 (2016).
57.
Saint-Amour, P. K. Applied Modernism. Theory, Culture & Society 28, 241–269 (2011).
58.
Saitluanga, B. L. Vertical Differentiation in Urban Space: A Case of Aizawl City. Singapore Journal of Tropical Geography 38, 216–228 (2017).
59.
Coaffee, J. Recasting the "Ring of Steel”: Designing Out Terrorism in the City of London? in Cities, War, and Terrorism: Towards an Urban Geopolitics (Blackwell Publishing, 2004).
60.
Coaffee, J. Recasting the "Ring of Steel”: Designing Out Terrorism in the City of London? in Cities, War and Terrorism: Towards an Urban Geopolitics (Blackwell Publishing, 2004).
61.
Coaffee, J. Laminated Security for London 2012. Urban Studies 48, 3311–3327 (2011).
62.
Sim, J. & Coleman, R. ‘You’ll Never Walk Alone’: CCTV Surveillance, Order and Neo-Liberal Rule in Liverpool City. British Journal of Sociology 51, 623–639 (2000).
63.
Fyfe, N. R. & Bannister, J. City Watching: Closed Circuit Television Surveillance in Public Spaces. Area 28, 37–46 (1996).
64.
Koskela, H. ‘The Gaze Without Eyes’: Video-Surveillance and the Changing Nature of Urban Space. Progress in Human Geography 24, 243–265 (2000).
65.
Klauser, F. Spatialities of Security and Surveillance: Managing Spaces, Separations and Circulations at Sport Mega Events. Geoforum 49, 289–298 (2013).
66.
Lomell, H. M. Targeting the Unwanted: Video Surveillance and Categorical Exclusion in Oslo, Norway. Surveillance & Society 2, (2004).
67.
Norris, C. & Armstrong, G. Maximum Surveillance Society: The Rise of CCTV. (Berg Publishers, 1999).
68.
Norris, C. The Growth of CCTV: A Global Perspective on the International Diffusion of Video Surveillance in Publicly Accessible Space. Surveillance & Society 2, (2004).
69.
Surveillance & Society Homepage. http://www.surveillance-and-society.org/.
70.
Arvidsson, A. On the ‘Pre-History of The Panoptic Sort’: Mobility in Market Research. Surveillance & Society 1, (2003).
71.
Adey, P. Facing Airport Security: Affect, Biopolitics, and the Preemptive Securitisation of the Mobile Body. Environment and Planning D: Society and Space 27, 274–295 (2009).
72.
Bitnik, M. Surveillance Chess. Surveillance & Society 12, 459–465 (2014).
73.
Coaffee, J. Rings of Steel, Rings of Concrete and Rings of Confidence: Designing Out Terrorism in Central London Pre and Post September 11th. International Journal of Urban and Regional Research 28, 201–211 (2004).
74.
Coleman, R. Images From a Neoliberal City: The State, Surveillance and Social Control. Critical Criminology 12, 21–42 (2004).
75.
Crang, M. & Graham, S. Sentient Cities Ambient Intelligence and the Politics of Urban Space. Information, Communication & Society 10, 789–817 (2007).
76.
Foucault, M. Discipline and Punish: The Birth of the Prison. (Penguin, 1991).
77.
Fonio, C. & Pisapia, G. Security, Surveillance and Geographical Patterns at the 2010 FIFA World Cup in Johannesburg. The Geographical Journal 181, 242–248 (2015).
78.
Fussey, P. The Regeneration Games: Purity and Security in the Olympic City1. The British Journal of Sociology 63, 260–284 (2012).
79.
Graham, S. & Wood, D. Digitizing Surveillance: Categorization, Space, Inequality. Critical Social Policy 23, 227–248 (2003).
80.
Haggerty, K. & Ericson, R. V. The Surveillant Assemblage. British Journal of Sociology 51, 605–622 (2000).
81.
Herbert, S. The Geopolitics of the Police: Foucault, Disciplinary Power and the Tactics of the Los Angeles Police Department. Political Geography 15, 47–59 (1996).
82.
Kitchin, R. The Real-Time City? Big Data and Smart Urbanism. GeoJournalSocial ScientistScientific American 79, 1–14 (2014).
83.
Koskela, H. ‘The Gaze Without Eyes’: Video-Surveillance and the Changing Nature of Urban Space. Progress in Human Geography 24, 243–265 (2000).
84.
Koskela, H. ‘Cam Era’ — the Contemporary Urban Panopticon. Surveillance & Society 1, 292–313 (2003).
85.
Lippert, R. Municipal Corporate Security and the Intensification of Urban Surveillance. Surveillance & Society 9, 310–320 (2012).
86.
Little, C. The ‘Mosquito’ and the Transformation of British Public Space. Journal of Youth Studies 18, 167–182 (2015).
87.
Lyon, D. Surveillance as Social Sorting: Privacy, Risk, and Digital Discrimination. (Routledge, 2003).
88.
Lyon, D. Surveillance as Social Sorting: Privacy, Risk, and Digital Discrimination. (Routledge, 2003).
89.
Lyon, D. Surveillance After September 11. (Polity, 2003).
90.
Jackson, R. Routledge Handbook of Critical Terrorism Studies. (Routledge, 2016).
91.
Jackson, R. Routledge Handbook of Critical Terrorism Studies. (Routledge, 2016).
92.
Mitchell, D. & Heynen, N. The Geography of Survival and the Right to the City: Speculations on Surveillance, Legal Innovation, and the Criminalization of Intervention. Urban Geography 30, 611–632 (2009).
93.
Murakami Wood, D. Surveillance in Urban Japan: A Critical Introduction. Urban Studies 44, 551–568 (2007).
94.
Yacobi, H. In-Between Surveillance and Spatial Protest: the Production of Space of the ‘Mixed City’ of Lod? Surveillance & Society 2, (2004).
95.
Elden, S. Secure the Volume: Vertical Geopolitics and the Depth of Power. Political Geography 34, 35–51 (2013).
96.
Graham, S. Vertical Geopolitics: Baghdad and After. Antipode 36, 12–23 (2004).
97.
Graham, S. Remember Fallujah: Demonising Place, Constructing Atrocity. Environment and Planning D: Society and Space 23, 1–10 (2005).
98.
Graham, S. Cities and the ‘War on Terror’. International Journal of Urban and Regional Research 30, 255–276 (2006).
99.
Graham, S. Cities Under Siege: The New Military Urbanism. (Verso, 2011).
100.
Iveson, K. The Wars on Graffiti and the New Military Urbanism. City 14, 115–134 (2010).
101.
Warren, R. Situating the City and September 11th: Military Urban Doctrine, ‘Pop-Up’ Armies and Spatial Chess. International Journal of Urban and Regional Research 26, 614–619 (2002).
102.
Angotti, T. Apocalyptic Anti-Urbanism: Mike Davis and His Planet of Slums. International Journal of Urban and Regional Research 30, 961–967 (2006).
103.
Bleibleh, S. Walking Through Walls. Space and Culture 18, 156–170 (2015).
104.
Boal, F. W. Belfast: Walls Within. Political Geography 21, 687–694 (2002).
105.
Brown, S. Central Belfast’s Security Segment: An Urban Phenomenon. Area 17, 1–9 (1985).
106.
Fregonese, S. The Urbicide of Beirut? Geopolitics and the Built Environment in the Lebanese Civil War (1975–1976). Political Geography 28, 309–318 (2009).
107.
Graham, S. Bulldozers and Bombs: The Latest Palestinian-Israeli Conflict as Asymmetric Urbicide. Antipode 34, 642–649 (2002).
108.
Graham, S. Lessons in Urbicide. New Left Review 19, (2003).
109.
Hewitt, K. ‘When the Great Planes Came and Made Ashes of Our City ...’1: Towards an Oral Geography of the Disasters of War. Antipode 26, 1–34 (1994).
110.
Scott, J. C. Seeing Like a State: How Certain Schemes to Improve the Human Condition Have Failed. (Yale University Press, 1998).
111.
Scott, J. C. Seeing Like a State: How Certain Schemes to Improve the Human Condition Have Failed. (Yale University Press, 2020).
112.
Tierney, K. Disaster as War: Militarism and the Social Construction of Disaster in New Orleans. in The Sociology of Katrina: Perspectives on a Modern Catastrophe (Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, 2007).
113.
Teirney, K. Disaster as War: Militarism and the Social Construction of Disaster in New Orleans. in The Sociology of Katrina: Perspectives on a Modern Catastrophe (Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, 2007).
114.
Weizman, E. Hollow Land: Israel’s Architecture of Occupation. (Verso, 2012).
115.
Weizman, E. Walking Through Walls. Radical Philosophy 136, 8–22 (2006).
116.
Weizman, E. Introduction to The Politics of Verticality | openDemocracy. https://www.opendemocracy.net/ecology-politicsverticality/article_801.jsp (2002).
117.
Adey, P. Mobilities: Politics, Practices, Places. in Introducing Human Geographies (Routledge, 2013).
118.
Adey, P. Mobilities: Politics, Practices, Places. in Introducing Human Geographies (ed. Cloke, P.) (2013).
119.
Coaffee, J. & Rogers, P. Rebordering the City for New Security Challenges: From Counter-Terrorism to Community Resilience. Space and Polity 12, 101–118 (2008).
120.
Graham, S. "Homeland” Insecurities? Space and Culture 9, 63–67 (2006).
121.
Klein, N. & Smith, N. The Shock Doctrine: A Discussion. Environment and Planning D: Society and Space 26, 582–595 (2008).
122.
Sheller, M. The Islanding Effect: Post-Disaster Mobility Systems and Humanitarian Logistics in Haiti. cultural geographies 20, 185–204 (2013).
123.
Smith, N. There’s No Such Thing as a Natural Disaster | Items. https://items.ssrc.org/understanding-katrina/theres-no-such-thing-as-a-natural-disaster/ (2006).
124.
Agamben, G. State of Exception. (University of Chicago Press, 2005).
125.
Agamben, G. State of Exception. (University of Chicago Press, 2005).
126.
Bartling, H. Suburbia, Mobility, and Urban Calamities. Space and Culture 9, 60–62 (2006).
127.
Eggers, D. Zeitoun. (Hamish Hamilton, 2010).
128.
Graham, S. Disrupted Cities: When Infrastructure Fails. (Routledge, 2010).
129.
Graham, S. Disrupted Cities: When Infrastructure Fails. (Routledge, 2010).
130.
Graham, S. Olympics 2012 Security. City 16, 446–451 (2012).
131.
Graham, S. When Life Itself Is War: On the Urbanization of Military and Security Doctrine. International Journal of Urban and Regional Research 36, 136–155 (2012).
132.
Hartnell, A. Katrina Tourism and a Tale of Two Cities: Visualizing Race and Class in New Orleans. American QuarterlyThe Journal of American HistoryThe Journal of American FolkloreAmerican QuarterlyAmerican Quarterly 61, 723–747 (2009).
133.
Klein, N. The Shock Doctrine: The Rise of Disaster Capitalism. (Penguin, 2008).
134.
Ramadan, A. Destroying Nahr El-Bared: Sovereignty and Urbicide in the Space of Exception. Political Geography 28, 153–163 (2009).
135.
Shapiro, M. & Bird-David, N. Routinergency: Domestic Securitization in Contemporary Israel. Environment and Planning D: Society and Space 35, 637–655 (2017).
136.
Walker, J. Moving Testimonies and the Geography of Suffering: Perils and Fantasies of Belonging After Katrina. Continuum 24, 47–64 (2010).
137.
Baumann, H. Enclaves, Borders, and Everyday Movements: Palestinian Marginal Mobility in East Jerusalem. Cities 59, 173–182 (2016).
138.
Braverman, I. Civilized Borders: A Study of Israel’s New Crossing Administration. Antipode 43, 264–295 (2011).
139.
Caldeira, T. P. R. Fortcified Enclaves: The New Urban Segregation. Public Culture 8, 303–328 (1996).
140.
Caldeira, T. P. do R. City of Walls: Crime, Segregation, and Citizenship in São Paulo. (University of California Press, 2000).
141.
Coy, M. & Pöhler, M. Gated Communities in Latin American Megacities: Case Studies in Brazil and Argentina. Environment and Planning B: Planning and Design 29, 355–370 (2002).
142.
Coy, M. Gated Communities and Urban Fragmentation in Latin America: The Brazilian Experience. GeoJournalJournal of the SouthwestBuilt Environment (1978-)Development in PracticeThe Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 66, 121–132 (2006).
143.
Hook, D. & Vrdoljak, M. Gated Communities, Heterotopia and a "Rights” of Privilege: A `Heterotopology’ of the South African Security-Park. Geoforum 33, 195–219 (2002).
144.
Kaker, S. A. Enclaves, Insecurity and Violence in Karachi. South Asian History and Culture 5, 93–107 (2014).
145.
Le Goix, R. & Webster, C. J. Gated Communities. Geography Compass 2, 1189–1214 (2008).
146.
Rosière, S. & Jones, R. Teichopolitics: Re-Considering Globalisation Through the Role of Walls and Fences. Geopolitics 17, 217–234 (2012).
147.
Boal, F. W. Belfast: Walls Within. Political Geography 21, 687–694 (2002).
148.
Gayer, L. The Need for Speed: Traffic Regulation and the Violent Fabric of Karachi. Theory, Culture & Society 33, 137–158 (2016).
149.
Grant, J. & Mittelsteadt, L. Types of Gated Communities. Environment and Planning B: Planning and Design 31, 913–930 (2004).
150.
Handel, A. Gated/gating Community: The Settlement Complex in the West Bank. Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers 39, 504–517 (2014).
151.
Herbert, C. W. & Murray, M. J. Building from Scratch: New Cities, Privatized Urbanism and the Spatial Restructuring of Johannesburg after Apartheid. International Journal of Urban and Regional Research 39, 471–494 (2015).
152.
Hook, D. & Vrdoljak, M. Gated Communities, Heterotopia and a "Rights” of Privilege: A `Heterotopology’ of the South African Security-Park. Geoforum 33, 195–219 (2002).
153.
Jones, R. Border Security, 9/11 and the Enclosure of Civilisation. The Geographical Journal 177, 213–217 (2011).
154.
Landman, K. & Schönteich, M. Urban Fortresses. African Security Review 11, 71–85 (2002).
155.
Lang, R. E. & Danielsen, K. A. Gated Communities in America: Walling Out the World? Housing Policy Debate 8, 867–899 (1997).
156.
Lemanski, C. A New Apartheid? the Spatial Implications of Fear of Crime in Cape Town,  South Africa. Environment and Urbanization 16, 101–112 (2004).
157.
Murray, M. J. The Spatial Dynamics of Postmodern Urbanism: Social Polarisation and Fragmentation in Saão Paulo and Johannesburg. Journal of Contemporary African Studies 22, 139–164 (2004).
158.
Murray, M. J. Waterfall City (Johannesburg): Privatized Urbanism in Extremis. Environment and Planning A 47, 503–520 (2015).
159.
Pow, C.-P. Securing the ‘Civilised’ Enclaves: Gated Communities and the Moral Geographies of Exclusion in (Post-)socialist Shanghai. Urban Studies 44, 1539–1558 (2007).
160.
Rokem, J. & Vaughan, L. Segregation, Mobility and Encounters in Jerusalem: The Role of Public Transport Infrastructure in Connecting the ‘Divided City’. Urban Studies (2017) doi:10.1177/0042098017691465.
161.
Yiftachel, O. & Yacobi, H. Urban Ethnocracy: Ethnicization and the Production of Space in an Israeli ‘Mixed City’. Environment and Planning D: Society and Space 21, 673–693 (2003).
162.
Adey, P. Air/Atmospheres of the Megacity. Theory, Culture & Society 30, 291–308 (2013).
163.
Banister, D. Cities, Mobility and Climate Change. Journal of Transport Geography 19, 1538–1546 (2011).
164.
Choy, T. Air’s Substantiations. In Paper for Berkeley Environmental Politics Colloquium. (2010).
165.
Gandy, M. Urban Atmospheres. Cultural Geographies 24, 353–374 (2017).
166.
Ghertner, D. A. Nuisance Talk and the Propriety of Property: Middle Class Discourses of a Slum-Free Delhi. Antipode 44, 1161–1187 (2012).
167.
Ghertner, D. A. Calculating Without Numbers: Aesthetic Governmentality in Delhi’s Slums. Economy and Society 39, 185–217 (2010).
168.
Graham, S. Life Support: The Political Ecology of Urban Air. City 19, 192–215 (2015).
169.
Hitchings, R. Air Conditioning and the Material Culture of Routine Human Encasement. Journal of Material Culture 13, 251–265 (2008).
170.
Peterson, M. Atmospheric Sensibilities. Social Text 35, 69–90 (2017).
171.
Whitehead, M. State, Science and the Skies: Governmentalities of the British Atmosphere. (Wiley-Blackwell, 2009).
172.
Winter, T. An Uncomfortable Truth: Air-Conditioning and Sustainability in Asia. Environment and Planning A 45, 517–531 (2013).
173.
Dennis, S. Smokefree: A Social, Moral and Political Atmosphere. (Bloomsbury Academic, 2016).
174.
Engelmann, S. Toward a Poetics of Air: Sequencing and Surfacing Breath. Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers 40, 430–444 (2015).
175.
Nieuwenhuis, M. Breathing Materiality: Aerial Violence at a Time of Atmospheric Politics. Critical Studies on Terrorism 9, 499–521 (2016).
176.
Nieuwenhuis, M. The Governing of the Air: A Case Study of the Chinese Experience. Borderlands 15, 1–23 (2016).
177.
Feigenbaum, A. & Weissmann, D. Vulnerable Warriors: The Atmospheric Marketing of Military and Policing Equipment Before and After 9/11. Critical Studies on Terrorism 9, 482–498 (2016).
178.
Ghertner, D. A. Does Violence Have a Signature? Urban Geography 37, 343–347 (2016).
179.
Hitchings, R. Researching Air-Conditioning Addiction and Ways of Puncturing Practice: Professional Office Workers and the Decision to Go Outside. Environment and Planning A 43, 2838–2856 (2011).
180.
Closs Stephens, A. Urban Atmospheres: Feeling Like a City? International Political Sociology 9, 99–101 (2015).
181.
Walker, G. How Does Air Conditioning Become ‘Needed’? a Case Study of Routes, Rationales and Dynamics. Energy Research & Social Science 4, 1–9 (2014).
182.
Bruno, G. Ramble City: Postmodernism and ‘Blade Runner’. October 41, (1987).
183.
Burrows, R. Virtual Culture, Urban Social Polarisation and Social Science Fiction. in The Governance of Cyberspace: Politics, Technology and Global Restructuring (Routledge, 1997).
184.
Burrows, R. Virtual Culture, Urban Social Polarisation and Social Science Fiction. in The Governance of Cyberspace: Politics, Technology and Global Restructuring 35–42 (Routledge, 1997).
185.
Davis, M. Beyond Bladerunner: Urban Control, the Ecology of Fear.
186.
Gold, J. R. Under Darkened Skies: The City in Science-Fiction Film. GeographyScience Fiction StudiesBuilt Environment (1978-)CR: The New Centennial ReviewLuso-Brazilian Review 86, 337–345 (2001).
187.
Graham, S. Vertical Noir: Histories of the Future in Urban Science Fiction. City 20, 389–406 (2016).
188.
Harvey, D. The Condition of Postmodernity: An Enquiry Into the Origins of Cultural Change. (Blackwell, 1990).
189.
Hewitt, L. & Graham, S. Vertical Cities: Representations of Urban Verticality in 20th-Century Science Fiction Literature. Urban Studies 52, 923–937 (2015).
190.
Kitchin, R. & Kneale, J. Science Fiction or Future Fact? Exploring Imaginative Geographies of the New Millennium. Progress in Human Geography 25, 19–35 (2001).
191.
Klein, N. M. Building Blade Runner. Social Text (1991) doi:10.2307/466383.
192.
Marks, P. Imagining Surveillance: Utopian Visions and Surveillance Studies. Surveillance & Society 3, (2005).
193.
MacLeod, G. Spaces of Utopia and Dystopia: Landscaping the Contemporary City. Geografiska Annaler. Series B, Human Geography 84, 153–170 (2002).
194.
Yuen, W. K. On the Edge of Spaces: ‘Blade Runner’, ‘Ghost in the Shell’, and Hong Kong’s Cityscape. Science Fiction Studies 27, 1–21 (2000).
195.
Ballard, J. G. High-Rise. (4th Estate, 2016).
196.
Butt, A. Vicarious Vertigo: The Emotional Experience of Height in the Science Fiction City. Emotion, Space and Society (2017) doi:10.1016/j.emospa.2017.04.001.
197.
Clarke, D. B. The Cinematic City. (Routledge, 1997).
198.
Clarke, D. B. The Cinematic City. (Routledge, 1997).
199.
Cunningham, D. & Warwick, A. Unnoticed Apocalypse. City 17, 433–448 (2013).
200.
Gibson, W. Virtual Light. (Penguin Books, 2011).
201.
Kirby, D. The Future Is Now: Diegetic Prototypes and the Role of Popular Films in Generating Real-World Technological Development. Social Studies of ScienceWomen’s Studies QuarterlyJournal of Management Information SystemsRevue française d’études américainesStyle 40, 41–70 (2010).
202.
Kitchin, R. & Kneale, J. Lost in Space: Geographies of Science Fiction. (Continuum, 2002).
203.
Kitchin, R. & Kneale, J. Lost in Space: Geographies of Science Fiction. (Continuum, 2002).
204.
Kneale, J. Plots: Space, Conspiracy, and Contingency in William Gibson’s Pattern Recognition and Spook Country. Environment and Planning D: Society and Space 29, 169–186 (2011).
205.
Lippert, R. New Urban Surveillance: Technology, Mobility, and Diversity in 21st Century Cities. Surveillance & Society 9, 257–262 (2012).
206.
Muir, L. ‘Control Space?: Cinematic Representations of Surveillance Space Between Discipline and Control’. Surveillance & Society 9, 263–279 (2012).
207.
Nel, A. The Repugnant Appeal of the Abject: Cityscape and Cinematic Corporality In District 9. Critical Arts 26, 547–569 (2012).
208.
Palmås, K. Predicting What You’ll Do Tomorrow: Panspectric Surveillance and the Contemporary Corporation. Surveillance & Society 8, 338–354 (2011).
209.
Pike, D. L. Subterranean Cities: The World Beneath Paris and London, 1800-1945. (Cornell University Press, 2005).
210.
Pike, D. L. The Walt Disney World Underground. Space and Culture 8, 47–65 (2005).
211.
van Veuren, M. J. Tooth and Nail: Anxious Bodies in Neill Blomkamp’s. Critical Arts 26, 570–586 (2012).
212.
Weber, C. Securitising the Unconscious: The Bush Doctrine of Preemption And Minority Report. Geopolitics 10, 482–499 (2005).
213.
Wells, H. G. The Sleeper Awakes. (Penguin Classics, 2005).