LEADER 09884nam 22005293 450 001 9910876843503321 005 20231128080241.0 010 $a9781394257492 010 $a139425749X 010 $a9781394257478 010 $a1394257473 035 $a(MiAaPQ)EBC30970333 035 $a(Au-PeEL)EBL30970333 035 $a(CKB)29038781900041 035 $a(Exl-AI)30970333 035 $a(Perlego)4299083 035 $a(EXLCZ)9929038781900041 100 $a20231128d2024 uy 0 101 0 $aeng 135 $aurcnu|||||||| 181 $ctxt$2rdacontent 182 $cc$2rdamedia 183 $acr$2rdacarrier 200 10$aGlobalization and Dynamics of Urban Production 205 $a1st ed. 210 1$aNewark :$cJohn Wiley & Sons, Incorporated,$d2024. 210 4$dİ2024. 215 $a1 online resource (272 pages) 311 08$aPrint version: Aveline-Dubach, Natacha Globalization and Dynamics of Urban Production Newark : John Wiley & Sons, Incorporated,c2024 327 $aCover -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Contents -- Introduction -- I.1. Market finance's stranglehold on the city -- I.2. Diversity of modes of capital accumulation in real estate -- I.3. What are the consequences for contemporary capitalisms? -- I.4. References -- Part 1. Sectoral Reconfigurations of Property Markets and Urban (Re)Development -- Chapter 1. The Financialized City and the Extraction of Urban Rent -- 1.1. Institutionalization of direct connections between the urban built environment and financial markets -- 1.1.1. Securitization as a connector from the urban built environment to market finance -- 1.1.2. The consolidation of the driving role of the urban built environment thanks to connections to global investment circuits -- 1.1.3. Space at the heart of the valorization and extraction of value by the Global City -- 1.2. Territorialized chains of financialized urban production: a transcalary and multiactor re-intermediation -- 1.2.1. Financialization through the extraction of urban rent by financial landowners -- 1.2.2. Financialization through the extraction of urban rent via household property -- 1.2.3. The financialization of urban development strategies through municipal land -- 1.3. Conclusion -- 1.4. References -- Chapter 2. Real Estate Developers: Coordinating Actors in the Production of the City -- 2.1. The real estate developer, a multi-faceted player -- 2.1.1. What is a real estate developer? -- 2.1.2. The diversity of real estate developer profiles -- 2.2. The changing role of real estate developers: between market and politics -- 2.2.1. Is financialization (re)shaping real estate developers? -- 2.2.2. How (and why) do developers integrate "social" objectives? -- 2.2.3. Are environmental issues transforming the practices of real estate developers? -- 2.3. References. 327 $aChapter 3. Housing, Ownership, Assets and Debt: Geographical Approaches -- 3.1. Introduction: a renewed interest in housing finance and home ownership -- 3.2. Is residential real estate becoming a financialized asset? -- 3.2.1. Geographical approaches to the financialization of real estate -- 3.2.2. Property and inflationary mechanisms -- 3.2.3. Asset-based welfare -- 3.3. Geographical analysis of property market regimes -- 3.3.1. The value of property in space, renewal of a critical analysis -- 3.3.2. The limits of classical approaches to prices in the city -- 3.3.3. Market regimes -- 3.4. Property and socio-spatial segregation -- 3.4.1. The role of credit and intermediation in inequality and segregation -- 3.4.2. The new market mechanisms, a strengthening of the relationship between property and inequality -- 3.4.3. Sharing ownership -- 3.5. Conclusion -- 3.6. References -- Chapter 4. Logistics Urbanization, Between Real Estate Financialization and the Rise of Logistics Urban Planning -- 4.1. Introduction -- 4.2. Logistics development in the outer-suburbs: a dynamic of sprawl and financialization of logistics real estate -- 4.2.1. An increase in the number of warehouses to supply major cities -- 4.2.2. The logistics sprawl of metropolitan areas on a global scale -- 4.2.3. Financialized production of outer-suburban logistics zones -- 4.2.4. The challenges of regulating the diffuse urbanization of economic activities -- 4.3. Logistics development in urban centers: urban logistics -- 4.3.1. The rise of logistics real estate in urban centers: urban logistics facilities -- 4.3.2. Towards a logistics urban planning -- 4.3.3. The rise of a logistics real estate market in urban centers -- 4.4. Logistics spaces in the inner suburbs: the case of intermediate logistics as a blind spot in logistics urban planning. 327 $a4.4.1. Permanence and mutations of intermediate logistics activities in the suburbs -- 4.4.2. Intermediate logistics, a blind spot in public policy -- 4.5. Conclusion -- 4.6. References -- Chapter 5. The City-Port Relationship in the Metropolitan Fabric -- 5.1. The shift in city-port relations and the reconfiguration of intra-urban scales -- 5.2. The levels of the port metropolis -- 5.2.1. The terminalization movement -- 5.2.2. The docklandization movement -- 5.3. The city-port interfaces, support for major urban projects -- 5.3.1. Standardization versus differentiation (forms/functions) -- 5.4. Who governs the port metropolis? -- 5.5. Conclusion: "Creating the city with the port?" The agenda of the port metropolis -- 5.6. References -- Part 2. Regional Dynamics of Capital Accumulation in East Asian, Middle Eastern and West African Real Estate Markets -- Chapter 6. Land Value Capture and Its Large-Scale Application in Northeast Asia -- 6.1. Introduction -- 6.2. Origins and contemporary forms of LVC -- 6.2.1. Circulation of LVC models between the West and the East -- 6.2.2. Contemporary approaches to LVC -- 6.3. LVC strategies in East Asia -- 6.3.1. Flexible and consensual LVC practice in Japan -- 6.3.2. An LVC regime based on land concessions in Hong Kong -- 6.3.3. Optimization of the LVC by local governments in China -- 6.4. Conclusion -- 6.5. References -- Chapter 7. The Dual Regionalization of Real Estate Financialization in Southeast Asia -- 7.1. Introduction -- 7.2. The oligopolistic preconditions for the organization of real estate markets in Southeast Asia -- 7.3. A privatization of land tenure -- 7.4. Regionalization and internationalization of real estate development -- 7.5. Towards a rescaling of real estate production and urban governance -- 7.6. Financialization of the regional real estate market. 327 $a7.7. China and the new geopolitics of real estate in Southeast Asia -- 7.8. Conclusion -- 7.9. References -- Chapter 8. Real Estate in the Middle East: An Economy Shaped by Rents -- 8.1. Introduction -- 8.2. The financialization of economies and real estate in the Middle East -- 8.2.1. Arab metropolises as engines of economic development -- 8.2.2. Half of foreign investments are in real estate in the Middle East -- 8.2.3. Capital invested in real estate and Arab real estate investment trust -- 8.2.4. Households' indebtedness for mortgages in the Middle East -- 8.2.5. The legalization of informal settlements through the titling of "dead capital" -- 8.3. Egypt and Jordan: the squandering of public land and the construction of new cities -- 8.3.1. The new cities of Cairo -- 8.3.2. The Abdali project, Amman -- 8.3.3. Rental renewals and their current outcomes in Cairo and Amman -- 8.4. Saudi Arabia: tax innovation to finance housing -- 8.5. Lebanon and Syria: reconstruction policies as a means of consolidating elites -- 8.5.1. Lebanon, land of investor exemptions and subsidies -- 8.5.2. Syria confiscates refugees' property and deploys a policy of territorial revenge -- 8.6. Conclusion -- 8.7. References -- Chapter 9. Building Cities in West Africa: Construction Boom and Capitalism -- 9.1. Construction boom and cement industry -- 9.2. City-making: actors and sectors -- 9.3. Concrete, towers and megaprojects -- 9.4. "Social" housing programs -- 9.5. Self-build and incremental urbanization -- 9.6. Conclusion -- 9.7. References -- Conclusion -- C.1. The emergence of the international dimension of real estate -- C.2. Real estate, a highly sought-after asset -- C.3. The diversity of capital accumulation dynamics in real estate -- C.4. From sectorial and induced real estate to the integrated and driving production of urban construction. 327 $aC.5. The financialized urban construct as a concrete scene of the global city -- C.6. Social consequences and the need for rethinking public policies -- C.7. References -- List of Authors -- Index -- EULA. 330 $aThis book explores the complex dynamics of real estate markets and urban development across various global regions, with a focus on financialization, capital accumulation, and socio-political influences. It examines the interconnectedness between urban environments and financial markets, highlighting the role of real estate developers, housing finance, and property markets in shaping cities. The book delves into regional dynamics in East Asia, the Middle East, and West Africa, discussing land value capture, privatization, and the economic impact of real estate. Aimed at researchers, urban planners, and policymakers, the work provides a comprehensive analysis of contemporary capitalism's impact on urban spaces and the socio-spatial consequences of real estate development.$7Generated by AI. 606 $aReal estate development$7Generated by AI 606 $aFinancialization$7Generated by AI 615 0$aReal estate development 615 0$aFinancialization 700 $aAveline-Dubach$b Natacha$01192880 801 0$bMiAaPQ 801 1$bMiAaPQ 801 2$bMiAaPQ 906 $aBOOK 912 $a9910876843503321 996 $aGlobalization and Dynamics of Urban Production$94188057 997 $aUNINA