Metropolitan democracy, collective action and citizen participation No 38, 2024/1 - pagesPages 7 to 33Introduction: Do metropolises and democracy go well together? The many faces of metropolitan democracyBy Stéphane Cadiou, Charlotte Dolez, Benoît Feildel, Sébastien Segas, Thomas ZanettiPages 35 to 64Take climate action, change the metropolis: The Métro group’s strategies for influencing metropolitan policies in GrenobleBy Marine LucePages 65 to 84Promoting the harmless. Union representation and social conflict in the Aix-Marseille-Provence metropolisBy David GuérangerPages 85 to 113Representations of democracy put to the test in metropolitan spaces: The ambivalent adherence of intercommunal political staff to the scalar division of political workBy Adrien Bidaud-Bonod, Stéphane Cadiou, Sébastien SegasPages 115 to 146When the metropolis governs associations: Participation in public action and democratic management. The case of RSA implementation by the Lyon metropolitan areaBy Hélène MonnetPages 147 to 183The Grand Parisian metropolitanization and other cultural heritage projects. A comparison of the abandoned Reille convent in the 14th arrondissement of Paris and the Maladrerie housing complex in AubervilliersBy Géraldine DjamentPages 187 to 210Women on the move to keep working-class neighborhoods in check. The case of a participatory approach: exploratory walksBy Stéphanie Archat