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284 Pages·2018·13.4 MB·English
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Ilse Helbrecht Editor Gentrification and Resistance Researching Displacement Processes and Adaption Strategies Gentrification and Resistance Ilse Helbrecht Editor Gentrification and Resistance Researching Displacement Processes and Adaption Strategies Editor Ilse Helbrecht Berlin, Germany ISBN 978-3-658-20387-0 ISBN 978-3-658-20388-7 (eBook) https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-658-20388-7 Library of Congress Control Number: 2017960879 Springer VS © Springer Fachmedien Wiesbaden GmbH 2018 This work is subject to copyright. All rights are reserved by the Publisher, whether the whole or part of the material is concerned, specifically the rights of translation, reprinting, reuse of illustrations, recitation, broadcasting, reproduction on microfilms or in any other physical way, and transmission or information storage and retrieval, electronic adaptation, computer software, or by similar or dissimilar methodology now known or hereafter developed. The use of general descriptive names, registered names, trademarks, service marks, etc. in this publication does not imply, even in the absence of a specific statement, that such names are exempt from the relevant protective laws and regulations and therefore free for general use. The publisher, the authors and the editors are safe to assume that the advice and information in this book are believed to be true and accurate at the date of publication. Neither the publisher nor the authors or the editors give a warranty, express or implied, with respect to the material contained herein or for any errors or omissions that may have been made. The publisher remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations. Printed on acid-free paper This Springer VS imprint is published by Springer Nature The registered company is Springer Fachmedien Wiesbaden GmbH The registered company address is: Abraham-Lincoln-Str. 46, 65189 Wiesbaden, Germany We dedicate this book to displaced people, for their voices too often go unheard. Acknowledgements When it succeeds, the unity of teaching and research can be so rewarding! This book speaks to the possibility of uniting the academic duty of lecturing and the joy of research. I would like to thank the wonderful former students who ac- companied me on the long journey from seminar to seminar to book publication. Beginning in the summer semester of 2012, we explored gentrification and displacement in a series of modules in the Masters program "Geography of Urbanization" at the Humboldt University of Berlin. These seminars—in which there was intense debate and collaboration in the classroom—led to the chapters in this collection. During these classes I was, time and time again, deeply im- pressed by the persistence and commitment of the students to work hard and transform their project reports into publishable papers. This inspiring experience will remain with me, and help me to continue searching for the synergies be- tween research and teaching. A heartfelt thanks also goes to Matthias Bernt, Daniel Förste, Andrej Holm, and Guido Schulz for enriching what was original- ly a student project with their contributions. For the English edition of the book I am very much indebted to a group of talented translators who were assembled by Sandra Lustig. And last but not least: I am enormously grateful for the kind- ness, prudence, reliability and all encompassing support of Francesca Weber- Newth. She was so valuable in the production of this English edition, that it simply would not have been possible without her. She is a postdoc in my won- derful cultural and social geography department at the Humboldt University of Berlin. I am grateful and humbled to have such gifted young scholars around me. Ilse Helbrecht Contents Acknowledgements ............................................................................................. vii Ilse Helbrecht Gentrification and Displacement .......................................................................... 1 Christian Döring and Klaus Ulbricht Gentrification Hotspots and Displacement in Berlin A Quantitative Analysis ....................................................................................... 9 Daniel Förste and Matthias Bernt The Black Box of Displacement Do People Remain in their Neighborhoods or Relocate to the Periphery? ......... 37 Simon Koch, Marrike Kortus, Stephanie Schramm and Christine Stegner Where Do They Go? Where Do They Want to Go? Displacement from Kreuzberg ............................................................................ 57 Greta Ertelt, Carlotta-Elena Schulz, Georg Thieme and Christiane Uhlig The State-Made Rental Gap Gentrification in Subsidized Rental Housing ...................................................... 91 Lisa Heidsieck Kotti & Co: New Forms of Displacement, New Forms of Protest ........................................ 131 Nelly Grotefendt, Malve Jacobsen, Tanja Kohlsdorf and Lina Wegener Unemployment Benefit Recipients: Causes, Reactions and Consequences of Housing Relocations ......................... 161 X Contents Paul Neupert Trailer Living: A Displacement Phenomenon? ......................................................................... 189 Camilo Betancourt Residential Biographies as an Instrument of Sociospatial Displacement Analysis ...................................................................................... 227 Andrej Holm and Guido Schulz GentriMap: A Model for Measuring Gentrification and Displacement ................................ 251 Authors .............................................................................................................. 279 Gentrification and Displacement Ilse Helbrecht Gentrification, displacement, skyrocketing rents—aside from the ever-present topic of refugees, no other issue in urban development in Germany has attracted as much attention in recent years as this. Since the 2008 financial crisis—and with the new-found, old love of investors for (residential) real estate as a lucrative investment, real estate prices in many cities have been spiraling upward, with many critics warning of the risk of a speculative bubble. Accelerated by the ongoing trend toward metropolitanization and reurbanization, the urban housing markets in conurbations such as Munich, Hamburg, Cologne, Berlin, Frankfurt am Main, and Leipzig are suffering from intensifying competition. Debates on the problem are widespread throughout the world, focusing on cities such as London, New York, Hong Kong, Seoul, and Santiago de Chile (Smith 2002; Ley and Teo 2014; Lees et al. 2016). High- income groups are displacing lower-income residents, especially from neighborhoods in city centers. Against the backdrop of an income gap that is widening in many Western countries and that has made social polarization a tangible aspect of the everyday city life, good, inexpensive housing is not only scarce in urban areas, but is fiercely fought over (Holm 2010). For more than fifty years, urban researchers have been explaining the underlying processes in pleasingly context-sensitive and theoretically nuanced ways. Beginning with Ruth Glass (1964) and her seminal definition of gentrification, researchers have produced a large number of empirical studies and conceptual findings worldwide. However, despite all of this scholarly insight and expertise, they have focused on only one side of this urban revitalization process. For a long time in urban research, gentrification has been competently examined solely from the perspective of renewal (see Helbrecht 1996; Ley 1996). A variety of questions have been posed and answered: Who are the pioneers of gentrification? What factors make a neighborhood attractive for the gentrifiers? Who arrives after them? What real estate conditions are prerequisites (rent gaps, etc.)? What forms and phases of gentrification can be observed? How does gentrification change a neighborhood’s commercial structure ("commercial gentrification")? Common to all of these questions—and © Springer Fachmedien Wiesbaden GmbH 2018 I. Helbrecht, Gentrification and Resistance, https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-658-20388-7_1 2 Ilse Helbrecht also to the answers formulated by the international research community—is the exclusive interest in the social, functional, and architectural renewal of urban spaces. Whether from a sociological, geographical, ethnological, or urban planning perspective, the field of urban studies has long been preoccupied with explaining gentrification and thus with elucidating the root causes of its processes, forms, and phenomena. What is almost entirely overlooked are the consequences of gentrification for the displaced population (Slater 2009; Atkinson et al. 2011; Butler et al. 2013). Courageous pioneering attempts in the 1980s to shed light on the demographic characteristics of the displaced people and the scope of displacement (Henig 1980; Gale 1985) attracted almost no followers—and thus had no impact. More than 30 years ago, Peter Marcuse extensively defined and differentiated various forms of displacement (Marcuse 1985, p. 204ff.), yet empirical studies and valid findings in this field are a rarity today. As Tom Slater succinctly writes, "There is next to nothing published on the experiences of non-gentrifying groups living in the neighborhoods into which the much-researched cosmopolitan middle classes are arriving en masse" (Slater 2006, p. 743). And just as we know little about the people who have remained in their old neighborhoods, we know even less about those who were forced out as a result of renewal and displacement. The only recent study to look at the consequences of gentrification for the low- status groups who remain in their neighborhoods was undertaken by the Australian geographers Kate S. Shaw and Iris W. Hagemans. Using Melbourne as a case study, the two researchers conclude that even in places where low- status populations are able to remain in a gentrified neighborhood because of public housing, they nevertheless suffer from a sense of alienation and uprootedness due to gentrification pressures. In summary, the authors write: "This research shows that secure housing is not sufficient to alleviate the pressure of displacement on low-income residents in gentrifying areas. Although these residents remain in place, the class remake produces a sense of loss of place: of entitlement to be there and be catered for" (Shaw and Hagemans 2015, p. 33). Thus, as a displacement process, gentrification has grave consequences for the people affected. However, we have far too little scholarly knowledge about both extent and nature of these consequences. Urban research is a one-eyed cyclops that operates with an enormous intellectual bias because it observes only the upgrading aspect of the gentrification process while ignoring the aspect of displacement. From a scholarly perspective, this is both untenable and has no basis in reason. Furthermore, for urban policy, this (thematic) "displacement" of displacement is just as tragic as it is consequential. After all, gentrification is by no means a smooth, conflict-free process that we can observe only from a scientific remove. Rather, it is a process of displacement, a process in which

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Gentrification is arguably the most dynamic area of conflict in current urban development policy – it is the process by which poorer populations are displaced by more affluent groups. Although gentrification is well-documented, German and international research largely focuses on improvements in t
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Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.