The making of space and the losing of place : a critical geography of gentrification-by-bulldozer in the north of England

Much like the economic system that drives and sustains it, gentrification is a dynamic phenomenon that is continuously evolving and diversifying to take advantage of new opportunities. The diversification and proliferation of gentrification takes different forms and envelops a range of geographies,...

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Main Author: Crookes, Lee
Published: University of Sheffield 2012
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Online Access:http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.575488
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spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-5754882017-02-17T03:23:48ZThe making of space and the losing of place : a critical geography of gentrification-by-bulldozer in the north of EnglandCrookes, Lee2012Much like the economic system that drives and sustains it, gentrification is a dynamic phenomenon that is continuously evolving and diversifying to take advantage of new opportunities. The diversification and proliferation of gentrification takes different forms and envelops a range of geographies, actors and victims. Recently, state-led, 'new build' gentrification has emerged as the latest mutation of gentrification. To date, however, this particular form of gentrification has largely been associated with dis-used 'brownfield' sites, where the absence of a resident population precludes direct displacement. This thesis adds to academic understandings of new build gentrification by extending analysis to urban areas in the north of England, conceptualising Housing Market Renewal and similar programmes as particularly aggressive forms of state-led, new-build gentrification that involve the direct displacement of incumbent residents, demolition of existing housing and the erasure of meaningful places to assemble land for the purpose of redevelopment. Examining the place-meanings of working-class residents living in areas threatened with demolition, the thesis develops a geography of (new-build) gentrification that is focused on matters of home, place and place attachment. Advocating a deeper appreciation of people's prior emplacement, the thesis seeks to re-appraise the meaning and value of places that are too readily dismissed as 'disinvested' or 'decaying' by distanced 'outsiders', including policy-makers, planners and urban scholars. Using data from case studies in the north of England, the thesis further demonstrates how the state dispossesses people of their homes through a combination of discourse, attrition and compulsion. Finding evidence of the damaging impacts of displacement, the thesis concludes by calling for a re- orientation of gentrification research to adopt a more emplaced perspective, thereby strengthening the case for re-conceptualising displacement as a form of social harm.307.1212University of Sheffieldhttp://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.575488http://etheses.whiterose.ac.uk/14595/Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
collection NDLTD
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topic 307.1212
spellingShingle 307.1212
Crookes, Lee
The making of space and the losing of place : a critical geography of gentrification-by-bulldozer in the north of England
description Much like the economic system that drives and sustains it, gentrification is a dynamic phenomenon that is continuously evolving and diversifying to take advantage of new opportunities. The diversification and proliferation of gentrification takes different forms and envelops a range of geographies, actors and victims. Recently, state-led, 'new build' gentrification has emerged as the latest mutation of gentrification. To date, however, this particular form of gentrification has largely been associated with dis-used 'brownfield' sites, where the absence of a resident population precludes direct displacement. This thesis adds to academic understandings of new build gentrification by extending analysis to urban areas in the north of England, conceptualising Housing Market Renewal and similar programmes as particularly aggressive forms of state-led, new-build gentrification that involve the direct displacement of incumbent residents, demolition of existing housing and the erasure of meaningful places to assemble land for the purpose of redevelopment. Examining the place-meanings of working-class residents living in areas threatened with demolition, the thesis develops a geography of (new-build) gentrification that is focused on matters of home, place and place attachment. Advocating a deeper appreciation of people's prior emplacement, the thesis seeks to re-appraise the meaning and value of places that are too readily dismissed as 'disinvested' or 'decaying' by distanced 'outsiders', including policy-makers, planners and urban scholars. Using data from case studies in the north of England, the thesis further demonstrates how the state dispossesses people of their homes through a combination of discourse, attrition and compulsion. Finding evidence of the damaging impacts of displacement, the thesis concludes by calling for a re- orientation of gentrification research to adopt a more emplaced perspective, thereby strengthening the case for re-conceptualising displacement as a form of social harm.
author Crookes, Lee
author_facet Crookes, Lee
author_sort Crookes, Lee
title The making of space and the losing of place : a critical geography of gentrification-by-bulldozer in the north of England
title_short The making of space and the losing of place : a critical geography of gentrification-by-bulldozer in the north of England
title_full The making of space and the losing of place : a critical geography of gentrification-by-bulldozer in the north of England
title_fullStr The making of space and the losing of place : a critical geography of gentrification-by-bulldozer in the north of England
title_full_unstemmed The making of space and the losing of place : a critical geography of gentrification-by-bulldozer in the north of England
title_sort making of space and the losing of place : a critical geography of gentrification-by-bulldozer in the north of england
publisher University of Sheffield
publishDate 2012
url http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.575488
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