This article brings Lefebvre’s Right to the City thesis into conversation with Bauman’s notion of the flawed consumer to account for the neoliberal colonisation of public tenant organising in urban redevelopment. Drawing on a case study of public housing redevelopment from Sydney, Australia, we show that neoliberal community building and the emergence of professional community builders obviate the self-organising efforts of tenants. In this case tenants’ rights were attenuated when the housing authority invited private capital to not only rebuild the physical fabric but also remake the social relations around public tenancy within the trope of consumerism. We argue for a revival of tenant self-organising as a collective political project th...
Urban and social policy in Australia has undergone significant reform over the last 50 years, linked...
This article reports on a study of the Waterloo public housing estate in Sydney, Australia. In 2015,...
© The Author(s) 2018. In 2014, the New South Wales government announced that all of the 465 public h...
This paper argues that place-based participation strategies, deployed by housing authorities as comp...
Global city discourses rearticulate the relationships between the state, urban space and the global ...
Global city discourses rearticulate the relationships between the state, urban space and the global ...
The analysis of neoliberalism has become a key point of departure in critical urban studies and poli...
The analysis of neoliberalism has become a key point of departure in critical urban studies and poli...
Much has been written about the way in which global city discourses rearticulate the relationships b...
Master-planned residential development has proliferated as a new residential phenomenon in metropoli...
Critical urban research arising from the ‘new urban politics’ rich heritage has conventionally privi...
Critical urban research arising from the \u27new urban politics\u27 rich heritage has conventionally...
Critical urban research arising from the 'new urban politics' rich heritage has conventionally privi...
Master-planned residential development has proliferated as a new residential phenomenon in metropoli...
This article provides an international context to the We Call These Projects Home report by describi...
Urban and social policy in Australia has undergone significant reform over the last 50 years, linked...
This article reports on a study of the Waterloo public housing estate in Sydney, Australia. In 2015,...
© The Author(s) 2018. In 2014, the New South Wales government announced that all of the 465 public h...
This paper argues that place-based participation strategies, deployed by housing authorities as comp...
Global city discourses rearticulate the relationships between the state, urban space and the global ...
Global city discourses rearticulate the relationships between the state, urban space and the global ...
The analysis of neoliberalism has become a key point of departure in critical urban studies and poli...
The analysis of neoliberalism has become a key point of departure in critical urban studies and poli...
Much has been written about the way in which global city discourses rearticulate the relationships b...
Master-planned residential development has proliferated as a new residential phenomenon in metropoli...
Critical urban research arising from the ‘new urban politics’ rich heritage has conventionally privi...
Critical urban research arising from the \u27new urban politics\u27 rich heritage has conventionally...
Critical urban research arising from the 'new urban politics' rich heritage has conventionally privi...
Master-planned residential development has proliferated as a new residential phenomenon in metropoli...
This article provides an international context to the We Call These Projects Home report by describi...
Urban and social policy in Australia has undergone significant reform over the last 50 years, linked...
This article reports on a study of the Waterloo public housing estate in Sydney, Australia. In 2015,...
© The Author(s) 2018. In 2014, the New South Wales government announced that all of the 465 public h...