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Commercial gentrification, ethnicity, and social mixedness: the case of Javastraat, Indische Buurt, Amsterdam

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journal contribution
posted on 2020-04-01, 10:56 authored by Bahar Sakızlıoğlu, Loretta Lees

In this paper, we investigate the ethnic politics of commercial gentrification. We discuss how ethnicity is conceived of, managed by, and integrated into urban policy; and how the changing ethnic composition of the neighborhood is perceived and lived by entrepreneurs with different ethnic and class backgrounds. We employ the notion of “mixed embeddedness,” coined by Kloosterman et al., to understand the changes gentrification brings about for ethnic minority entrepreneurs and to explain their responses to these changes. Using the case study of a gentrifying street in Amsterdam, namely, Javastraat in Indische Buurt, we draw on an analysis of ethnic packaging at the policy level as well as in depth interviews with ethnically Dutch and ethnic minority entrepreneurs. Our findings shed light on how ethnic minorities survive and manage commercial gentrification on their doorsteps as well as the complexity of social mixedness in gentrifying neighborhoods.

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Citation

Sakızlıoğlu, B. and Lees, L. (2019), Commercial Gentrification, Ethnicity, and Social Mixedness: The Case of Javastraat, Indische Buurt, Amsterdam. City & Community. doi:10.1111/cico.12451

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/Organisation/COLLEGE OF SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING/School of Geography, Geology and the Environment/Human Geography

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  • VoR (Version of Record)

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City and Community

Publisher

Wiley for American Sociological Association, Community and Urban Sociology Section

issn

1535-6841

Acceptance date

2019-08-24

Copyright date

2019

Available date

2019-11-15

Publisher version

https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1111/cico.12451

Language

en

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