The Commodification Gap. Matthias Bernt

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(2016) and there is no privileged position of one potential case against the other. Second, there are practical issues. Analysing the relationship between gentrification and public policies on an in‐depth basis in different countries demands the researcher have the capacity to read local literature, analyse planning documents and legislations, and conduct interviews.5 Furthermore, background knowledge on history, culture and social structures is helpful, to say the least. As German, Russian and English are the only three languages I speak to a degree that allows for this kind of work and as I didn’t have the resources to hire a team of researchers, the selection of cases has been influenced by my personal background. I also have known all three cities for a long time, which made it easier to build upon existing contacts and obtain access to various sources of information.

      With regard to data and sources, the research strategy has been different for all three cases studied.

      In this respect, London is the birthplace of gentrification as a concept and arguably one of the top sites covered by urban studies worldwide. When trying to understand the constellations here, I was able to draw on an expansive and varied literature. Moreover, due to the concentration of academic institutions in London, I profited enormously from the background knowledge and advice provided by fellow researchers who have studied London for decades. I also interviewed a limited number of experts on the neighbourhood I researched, including real estate managers and planners. In addition, compared with Germany and Russia, the range and the quality of statistical data is excellent and the data was accessible.

      My research on Prenzlauer Berg differs from this. Prenzlauer Berg is not only the place I have lived in for most of the last 30 years, but it is also a neighbourhood that I have studied intensively since I became an academic. As a consequence, most of the data and much of the interpretation included in this book are based on past work that I have brought together and updated for this study. Methods used here include a literature review, the analysis of public planning documents, interviews and participant observation in numerous events, meetings and public hearings over the last three decades.

      Notes

      1 1 In a similar vein but with different language, David Ley has characterised the gentrification concept as ‘promiscuous’ and as having ‘a never‐ending appetite to include more and more areas into its study’ (presentation at the RGS‐IBG Annual International Conference 2016, ‘Planetary Gentrification’, Authors‐Meet‐Critics session, 31 August 2016, London).

      2 2 While the debate following Jennifer Robinson’s book Ordinary Cities (2006) has become too extensive to be repeated here, three accusations can be summarised that form the core of many postcolonial critiques (see McFarlane 2010). First, it has been argued that urban studies have been dominated by Western parochialism and it has been suggested that theories and methodologies that were developed in the West were too easily applied in settings ‘foreign’ to their place of origin. Second, there is criticism that urban studies have been marked by a tendency to study the ‘usual suspects’; without including more dissimilar contexts, the opportunity to learn from differences is severely diminished, resulting in dominating paradigms being reinforced. Third, it has been pointed out that much of the debate has been marked by a search for ‘superlative’, ‘archetypal’ and ‘paradigmatic’ cities (see Beauregard 2003; Brenner 2003), leaving little space for cities that would not fall into this realm.

      3 3 I acknowledge that demand‐side explanations have helped a great deal in understanding gentrification, and I also accept that supply will never be delivered without demand, so understanding the demand for inner city housing and the underlying social, demographic and cultural patterns is important. Nevertheless, I refrain from including this wing of explanations in my

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