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Original Articles

Contesting the Financialization of Urban Space: Community Organizations and the Struggle to Preserve Affordable Rental Housing in New York City

Pages 144-165
Published online: 30 Nov 2016
 

ABSTRACT:

As cities have become both site and object of capital accumulation in a neoliberal political economy, the challenges to community practice aimed at creating, preserving, and improving affordable housing and neighborhoods have grown. Financial markets and actors are increasingly central to the workings of capitalism, transforming the meaning and significance of mortgage capital in local communities and redrawing the relationship between housing and urban inequality. This article addresses the integration of housing and financial markets through the case of “predatory equity,” a wave of aggressive private equity investment in New York City’s affordable rental sector during the mid-2000s real estate boom. I consider the potential for community organizations to develop innovative, effective, and progressive practices to contest the impact of predatory equity on affordable housing. Highlighting how organizations employed discursive and empirical tactics as well as tactics that reworked the sites, spaces, and structures of finance, this research speaks to the political possibility of contemporary community practice.

Additional information

Notes on contributors

Desiree Fields

Desiree Fields received her PhD in environmental psychology from the Graduate Center, City University of New York in 2013 and is Visiting Assistant Professor of Urban Studies at Queens College. Her research addresses how financial actors, processes, and imperatives produce urban space through the housing market, and how activists and community-based organizations might contest this financialization. Fields has published in the Journal of Urban Affairs; Emotion, Space and Society; Housing Policy Debate; and other journals. Fields is the 2013 Alma H. Young Emerging Scholar, an honor awarded by the Urban Affairs Association.
 

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