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The social cleansing of London council estates: everyday experiences of ‘accumulative dispossession’

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posted on 2019-10-17, 11:06 authored by Loretta Lees, Hannah White
London’s council estates and their residents are under threat like never before. Council tenants are being forced out of their homes due to estate renewal, welfare reforms, poverty, and the precarity of low-income work. Social cleansing can be understood as a geographical project made up of processes, practices, and policies designed to remove council estate residents from space and place, what we call a ‘new accumulative form of (state-led) gentrification’. We outline these accumulative processes, practices and policies, but more importantly we present grounded, empirical evidence of council tenants and leaseholders’ everyday experiences of dispossession, focusing our lens on three south London boroughs identified as eviction hotspots.

History

Citation

Housing Studies, 2020, 35 (10), https://doi.org/10.1080/02673037.2019.1680814

Author affiliation

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

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  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Housing Studies

Publisher

Taylor & Francis (Routledge)

issn

0267-3037

Acceptance date

2019-10-11

Copyright date

2020

Available date

2019-11-14

Language

en

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