1. Introduction: The Revolution continues (At-thawra mustamirra).- 2. Sudan&s Three Post-uprising Transitional Periods: Between Centre and Periphery, Revolution and War.- 3. "Divide and Rule": the Islamists and Inequality in Sudan.-Part I. This land is oursÙÙØ§ Ø§Ø§ÙØ±Ø¶ ÙØ°Ù.
The Reappropriation of Spaces and Livelihoods.-4. Justice and the Right to the City in the Revolutionary Context of Khartoum: Reclaiming Public Spaces through the Post-revolutionary Anti-corruption Committee.- 5. Back to the Future. The Negotiations for the Relaunch of Jezira Irrigated Scheme after Revolution.- 6. "Common places" between Memory and Promise in a Popular Neighbourhood of Revolutionary Khartoum (Dyum Ash-Shargiya).
-Part II. "Our unity is in our diversity" ØªÙØ¹Ùا ÙÙ ÙØØ¯ØªÙØ§. The Struggle against Hierarchical Differences.-7. A Revolution from the urban peripheries:Thenegarzgangs in Khartoum.- 8. Looking from the Margins: Exploring Aspects of Women&s Political Participation in Rural Jezira during December Revolution.- 9.
Sudanese Pastoralists& Marginalisation: the Unspeakable Spectre Haunting December Revolution?.- 10. Beyond Ethnicity and Religion: Colonial and Post-colonial Legacy of Capitalist Expansion in Eastern Sudan during Revolution and Counter-Revolution.-Part III. "We will build it" ØÙبÙÙÙÙ. New Subjectivities in a Process for Future Reshaping.-11. The Revolution's Street Art and Its Actors amid Depoliticization, Orientalism and Commodification.
- 12. Falling in Love and Getting Married During December Revolution. Shaking Historical Power of Gender Relations and Patriarchal Family.- 13. Crafting Archives of an Unfinished Revolution.- 14. "Freedom, Peace and Justice": the Biography of a Slogan and the Agency of Linguistic Resources in December Revolution.