In the Netherlands squatting was tolerated and regulated for decades. In October 2010 a new law turned the occupation of vacant properties into a criminal action punishable with up to two years imprisonment. This paper argues that while squatted spaces produce autonomous forms of urban commoning, both tolerance and criminalisation of squatting engendered multiple modes of enclosure and capture of the autonomous socio-spatial relations constituted through these spaces. By analysing techniques of disciplinary inte-gration, commodification and criminalisation, the paper suggests that the object of enclosure is not simply the common as such, but its radical capacity for autonomy from state control and capital capture
All over ‘Fortress Europe' groups of refugees and undocumented migrants are organizing themselves to...
To date, there has been no comprehensive analysis of the disperse research on the squatters’ movemen...
Mainstream mass media and politicians tend to portray squatters as civic evils. Breaking in and tres...
Drawing on critical criminology, this chapter analyses how the criminalisation of squatting was inte...
In both England and the Netherlands, squatting has recently been legislated against. Criminalisation...
In the late 1970s, Amsterdam's squatted domain grew to comprise hundreds of buildings, and a city wi...
This research analyses how the criminalisation of the Amsterdam squatting movement works. The key re...
Squatters, through the 'illegal' occupation of (urban) spaces, tempt to problematize the conventiona...
A recent change in attitude of politicians and officials in Amsterdam towards artists who use squatt...
When considering alternatives, a classic question is whether they can be scaled up beyond a proof of...
This report is the outcome of a research project that took place in The Netherlands between 2008 and...
In October 2010 squatting in the Netherlands was prohibited by law. This timing seems strange, becau...
This paper discusses the struggles of the We Are Here movement in Amsterdam as resistance to both se...
The Squatters’ Movement in Europe is the first definitive guide to squatting as an alternative to ca...
textabstractSquatting became illegal in the Netherlands on 1 October 2010. The paper examines the dy...
All over ‘Fortress Europe' groups of refugees and undocumented migrants are organizing themselves to...
To date, there has been no comprehensive analysis of the disperse research on the squatters’ movemen...
Mainstream mass media and politicians tend to portray squatters as civic evils. Breaking in and tres...
Drawing on critical criminology, this chapter analyses how the criminalisation of squatting was inte...
In both England and the Netherlands, squatting has recently been legislated against. Criminalisation...
In the late 1970s, Amsterdam's squatted domain grew to comprise hundreds of buildings, and a city wi...
This research analyses how the criminalisation of the Amsterdam squatting movement works. The key re...
Squatters, through the 'illegal' occupation of (urban) spaces, tempt to problematize the conventiona...
A recent change in attitude of politicians and officials in Amsterdam towards artists who use squatt...
When considering alternatives, a classic question is whether they can be scaled up beyond a proof of...
This report is the outcome of a research project that took place in The Netherlands between 2008 and...
In October 2010 squatting in the Netherlands was prohibited by law. This timing seems strange, becau...
This paper discusses the struggles of the We Are Here movement in Amsterdam as resistance to both se...
The Squatters’ Movement in Europe is the first definitive guide to squatting as an alternative to ca...
textabstractSquatting became illegal in the Netherlands on 1 October 2010. The paper examines the dy...
All over ‘Fortress Europe' groups of refugees and undocumented migrants are organizing themselves to...
To date, there has been no comprehensive analysis of the disperse research on the squatters’ movemen...
Mainstream mass media and politicians tend to portray squatters as civic evils. Breaking in and tres...