The Commodification Gap. Matthias Bernt

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      Table of Contents

      1  Cover

      2  Series Title

      3  Title Title

      4  Copyright Title

      5  List of Figures

      6  List of Tables

      7  Series Editors’ Preface

      8  Preface

      9  CHAPTER 1: Introduction Gentrification Between Universality and Particularity How to Compare? Why Compare? Concepts and Causation Design of this Study

      10  CHAPTER 2: Why the Rent Gap isn’t Enough Where the Rent Gap Works Well Where the Rent Gap Falls Short Embedding Gentrification

      11  CHAPTER 3: Three Countries, Three Housing Systems The British Experience The German Experience The Russian Experience State Intervention in Housing: Setting the Parameters for Gentrification

      12  CHAPTER 4: Barnsbury The Making of Early Gentrification The Right to Buy: Pouring Fuel on the Fire The New Economy of Gentrification From Value Gap to Super‐gentrification

      13  CHAPTER 5: Prenzlauer Berg From Plan to Market Rolling out the Market, Weakening Public Control Since 2000: Privately Financed Refurbishments, Condominium Boom and No Regulation New Build Gentrification and Energy Efficient Displacement Between Deregulation and Re‐regulation Gentrification with Brakes?

      14  CHAPTER 6: Splintered Gentrification Unpredictable Regeneration Schemes World Heritage vs. Gentrification The Dissolution of Kommunalki Flats State‐run Repair and Renewal Pro and Contra Gentrification

      15  CHAPTER 7: The Commodification Gap Universality vs. Particularity Revisited Gentrification and Decommodification Meeting the Challenge: New Directions for Research and Politics

      16  Appendix A: Compulsory Purchase in Barnsbury

      17  Appendix B: Residents in NS‐SeC Classes 1 and 2

      18  References

      19  Index

      20  End User License Agreement

      List of Tables

      1 Chapter 2TABLE 2.1 Classical forms of rent and gentrificationTABLE 2.2 Decommodification and displacement

      2 Chapter 3TABLE 3.1 Trends in household tenures, London 1961–2016 (Based on Housing in...TABLE 3.2 Subsidies for housing and housing construction by types of subsidi...TABLE 3.3 Regulations on rent increases in sitting tenancies in Germany, 197...TABLE 3.4 Regulations on rent increases in Berlin and Germany as of 2019TABLE 3.5 Estimated housing costs for a two‐bedroom flat in the centre of St...TABLE 3.6 Commodification gaps in the UK, Germany and Russia

      3 Chapter 4TABLE 4.1 Percentage of households by tenure in Barnsbury (Butler and Lees 2...TABLE 4.2 Social class in Barnsbury based on Butler and Lees (2006) and UK C...

      4 Chapter 5TABLE 5.1 Renovated flats in Urban Renewal Areas in Prenzlauer Berg 1994–200...TABLE 5.2 Percentage of sitting and new tenancies after renovation in Urban ...TABLE 5.3 Number and percentage of individually owned apartments in Urban Re...TABLE 5.4 New built housing units in the Urban Renewal Areas of Prenzlauer B...TABLE 5.5 Subsidised housing units and commitment periods in the Urban Renew...TABLE 5.6 Characteristics of different segments of the housing sector in the...

      5 Chapter 6TABLE 6.1 Planned renovations

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