“…Finally, the well-known concept of the 'Right to the City', conceived by Lefebvre (1977Lefebvre ( [1968), is based on an abstract claim to the city -referring to the right to work, to belong to and to determine the fate of the urban setting -and a concrete claim to social, economic and political goods -housing, culture, education, well-being, etc. (McCann, 2002;Brenner & Elden, 2009;Mitchell & Villanueva, 2010). It signifies the right to inhabit the city, the right to produce a new urban life (based on use value), and the right of the inhabitants to remain unalienated from capitalist urban life (Attoh, 2011;Purcell, 2013).…”