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Contents Contributors Acknowledgements Illustrations Foreword Introduction Just Green Enough in Transition Just Green Enough: Contesting Environmental Gentrification in Greenpoint, Brooklyn Winifred Curran and Trina Hamilton A just enough green? Industrial gentrification and competing socionatures in Greenpoint, Brooklyn Winifred Curran and Trina Hamilton Making Just Green Enough advocacy resilient: Diverse economies, ecosystem engineers and livelihood strategies for low-carbon futures Sarah Dooling Just Transition and Just-Green-Enough: Climate justice, economic development and community resilience Julie Sze and Elizabeth Yeampierre Green Displacements and Community Identity Greening the waterfront? Submerging history, finding risk Pamela Stern and Peter V Hall Alternative food and gentrification: Farmers markets, community gardens and the transformation of urban neighborhoods Pascale Joassart-Marcelli and Fernando Bosco The production of green: Gentrification and social change Jessica Ty Miller State-led Environmental Gentrification Environmental gentrification in Metropolitan Seoul: The case of greenbelt deregulation and development at Misa Riverside City Jay E. Bowen Displacement as disaster relief: Environmental gentrification and state informality in developing Chennai Priti Narayan Fixing sustainability: Social contestation and re-regulation in Vancouvers housing system Noah Quastel Mobilizing and Planning for Just, Green Futures Mobilizing community identity to imagine just green enough futures: A Chicago case study Leslie Kern Bring on the Yuppies and the Guppies! Green gentrification, environmental justice, and the politics of place in Frogtown, L.A. Esther Kim The contested future of Philadelphis Reading Viaduct: Blight, neighborhood amenity, or global attraction? Hamil Pearsall Informal urban green space as anti-gentrification strategy? Christoph D. D. Rupprecht and Jason A. Byrne Patient Capital and Reframing Value: Making New Urbanism Just Green Enough Dan Trudeau Index