04461nam 2200517 450 991067792740332120231110222711.01-119-60308-01-119-60306-41-119-60307-2(MiAaPQ)EBC6953224(Au-PeEL)EBL6953224(CKB)21511122600041(EXLCZ)992151112260004120221118d2022 uy 0engurcnu||||||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierThe commodification gap gentrification and public policy in London, Berlin and St. Petersburg /Matthias BerntJohn Wiley and Sons, IncHoboken, New Jersey :Wiley,[2022]©20221 online resource (275 pages)IJURR Studies in Urban and Social Change Book Print version: Bernt, Matthias The Commodification Gap Newark : John Wiley & Sons, Incorporated,c2022 9781119603047 1-119-60305-6 Includes bibliographical references and index.Cover -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Contents -- List of Figures -- List of Tables -- Series Editors' Preface -- Preface -- CHAPTER 1 Introduction -- Gentrification Between Universality and Particularity -- How to Compare? Why Compare? -- Concepts and Causation -- Design of this Study -- Notes -- CHAPTER 2 Why the Rent Gap isn't Enough -- Where the Rent Gap Works Well -- Where the Rent Gap Falls Short -- When and Why does Capital Flow? -- At Which Scale is the Rent Gap Positioned? -- Which Rent? -- Property as Control? -- How is the Rent Gap Realised? -- Embedding Gentrification -- Economy, Society and States -- The Commodification Gap -- Notes -- CHAPTER 3 Three Countries, Three Housing Systems -- The British Experience -- From Private Landlordism to a Dual Market -- The Thatcherite Revolution -- New Labour: More of the Same? -- Austerity and New 'Class War Conservatism' Under the Coalition Government -- Conclusion: Neoliberalism, Tenurial Transformation and Gentrification -- The German Experience -- From the Controlled Housing Economy to the Lücke Plan -- The Design of Tenant Protections -- The Conservative Wende -- Reunification and Neoliberal Consensus -- Conclusion: Gentrification Between Regulation and Deregulation -- The Russian Experience -- Housing in the Soviet Union -- From Shock Therapy to Failing Markets21 -- Restricted State Capacities and Opportunity Planning -- Conclusion: Gentrification in a Dysfunctional Market -- State Intervention in Housing: Setting the Parameters for Gentrification -- Notes -- CHAPTER 4 Barnsbury: Gentrification and the Policies of Tenure -- The Making of Early Gentrification -- The Right to Buy: Pouring Fuel on the Fire -- The New Economy of Gentrification -- Capital Gains Instead of Owner-Occupation -- Penalty Renting -- From Value Gap to Super-gentrification -- Notes.CHAPTER 5 Prenzlauer Berg: Gentrification Between Regulation and Deregulation -- 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? -- Notes -- CHAPTER 6 Splintered Gentrification: St Petersburg, Russia1 -- Unpredictable Regeneration Schemes -- World Heritage vs. Gentrification -- The Dissolution of Kommunalki Flats -- State-run Repair and Renewal -- Pro and Contra Gentrification -- Notes -- CHAPTER 7 The Commodification Gap -- Universality vs. Particularity Revisited -- Gentrification and Decommodification -- Meeting the Challenge: New Directions for Research and Politics -- Notes -- Appendix A Compulsory Purchase in Barnsbury -- Appendix B Residents in NS-SeC Classes 1 and 2 -- References -- Index -- EULA.IJURR Studies in Urban and Social Change Book Commodification GapGentrificationEnglandGermanyGentrification.307.3416Bernt Matthias1341259MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910677927403321The commodification gap3063662UNINA