** PART ONE – RIOTS AND FAIRYTALES FOR RADICALS
*** The invisible guerrillas
**** 1. Sarkozy, the ‘scum’ and the ‘Karcher’
**** 2. Were the cops, and their cars and buildings, the main targets?
**** 3. What is the importance of temp work and clandestine work?
**** 4. Quadrelli reinvents the wheel
**** 5. May ’68 general strike a joke?
**** 6. Fake and real dangers of fascism
**** 7. ‘Thousands deported’ – or three?
**** 8. The media image of the banlieusard is more complex
**** 9. The imaginary homogeneity of the banlieues
**** 10. Does control by ‘the Mob’ explain the unequal distribution of the riots?
**** 11. The left and suburban youth
**** 12. Banlieusards versus students?
**** 13. The French school system and social selection
**** 14. Are students worse than cops?
**** 15. Mythologisation of ’68 student culture
**** 16. The pseudo-concepts of the reactionary multiculturalist left
**** 17. 2007 Elections and the banlieues
**** 18. The role of the Algerian war in the suburban subconscious
** PART TWO – FORCES OF REPRESSION AND URBAN GUERRILLAS
*** Hating cops… and then what?
*** An asymmetric conflict
** PART THREE – SOME HYPOTHESES ABOUT ARMED STRUGGLE AND GUERILLA WARFARE
*** Various models
*** The conditions of success
*** Latin America: From urban guerrilla to democratic reformism
*** Armed struggle in the west: a total failure
*** A necessary assessment
** The racialisation of social questions leads nowhere
*** 1. How radical ‘White’ multiculturalists patronise their ‘non-White’ opponents’
*** 2. From the Black Panther Party to the Indigènes de la République: the suicidal racialisation of social questions