Real Estate and Global Urban History
Capitalist private property in land and buildings – real estate – is the ground of modern cities, materially, politically, and economically. It is foundational to their development and core to much theoretical work on the urban environment. It is also a central, pressing matter of political contestation in contemporary cities. Yet it remains largely without a history. This Element examines the modern city as a propertied space, defining real estate as a technology of (dis)possession and using it to move across scales of analysis, from the local spatiality of particular built spaces to the networks of legal, political, and economic imperatives that constitute property and operate at national and international levels. This combination of territorial embeddedness with more wide-ranging institutional relationships charts a route to an urban history that allows the city to speak as a global agent and artefact without dispensing with the role of states and local circumstance.
Product details
August 2021Adobe eBook Reader
9781108852388
0 pages
This ISBN is for an eBook version which is distributed on our behalf by a third party.
Table of Contents
- 1. Introduction: The Case for Real Estate
- 2. Real Estate and the Historiography of the City
- 3. Urban Theory, Through the Real Estate Lens
- 4. The Fleeting and the Fixed Global Urban Histories of Markets and Land
- 5. Conclusion
- 6. References.