<p>"This is a book that demands the attention and engagement of geographers, and others 'inside' and 'outside' academia, working on the intersections between social movements, political identities and the neoliberal state, ultimately offering a productive and uniquely positive approach to understanding and acting on the issues raised by such concerns." (<i>Area</i>, February 2011)</p> <p>"Featherstone has produced a book as dexterous, creative, and wide-ranging as the political networks it seeks to describe." (<i>Progress in Human Geography and Environment and Planning D</i>, February 2011)</p> <p>"This reviewer thinks we should be rather more generous - for, whatever the political objectives, we should be hugely grateful for Featherstone's rescuing of the past relational geographies of resistance." (<i>Progress in Human Progress in Human Progress</i>, February 2011)</p> <p>"This persuasive, important, and well-written book rethinks resistance to dominant forms of globalization by emphasizing the translocal, often transnational, character of subaltern protest ... Featherstone has produced a book as dexterous, creative, and wide-ranging as the political network it seeks to describe." (<i>Environment and Planning D: Society and Space</i>, 2010)</p> <p>"In summary, RSPI is an incisive and stimulating work that significantly enhances our understanding of the construction and operation of counter-globalization networks. It extends and develops relational accounts of political identities and space in important ways, contributing to debates in political theory, human geography and social movement." (<i>Social Movement Studies</i>, 22 October 2010)</p> <p>"Featherstone's book contributes to our understanding of the formation of counter-global networks. He shows that transnational networks are not void of place.... This book provides a good starting point for scholars who seek an understanding what happens to networks when subaltern relationships are spread across the globe." (<i>Mobilization</i>, March 2010)</p> <p>"This optimistic take on the role of political contestation in world-making processes is a welcome change from the gloom and doom so typical of other geographical texts." (<i>Environment and Planning A</i>, 2009)</p>