A vibrant literature on territorial stigma has emerged over the past decade, detailing how particular neighbourhoods or districts have been discursively constructed as dangerous, depraved, deprived, dilapidated, and so on. Amidst this focus on the discursive, the role of numbers has been largely overlooked. In this article I argue that quantitative practices and statistical representations are central to the production of territory and to territorial stigmatization. I demonstrate how problem territories are produced through quantitative practices that reproduce forms of denigration and how statistical representations obfuscate the culpability of markets and the state and legitimize unjust interventions. I elaborate these arguments via three...
This paper draws on a multimethod ethnographic study, conducted between 2016 and 2017 in Shirebrook,...
Territorial exclusion is a multi-scalar phenomenon. However, research has tended to focus on exclusi...
The use of indicators and indexes in social policy, as part of evidence-based policy, is understood ...
This article illustrates how the stigmatization of public housing in Australia has been co-constitut...
This dissertation is about territorial stigmatisation and public housing in Sydney, Australia. It dr...
This dissertation presents an historical-sociological study of how governments of the modern western...
Many poor suburbs in Australia with higher than average numbers of public housing tenants do not sim...
Many poor suburbs in Australia with higher than average numbers of public housing tenants do not sim...
This paper considers the problem of stigmatisation towards tenants residing in public housing. It dr...
It is curious that the most frequently reviewed and well thought-out large housing estates are now t...
This paper offers a critical assessment of Loic Wacquant’s influential ‘advanced marginality’ framew...
International audienceThis article introduces the special issue on statactivism, a particular form o...
This article offers a critical assessment of Loic Wacquant’s influential advanced marginality framew...
Literature on territorial stigma, the persistent stigma attached to place, has traditionally accepte...
Loïc Wacquant has made a widely read and debated contribution to critical research on contemporary u...
This paper draws on a multimethod ethnographic study, conducted between 2016 and 2017 in Shirebrook,...
Territorial exclusion is a multi-scalar phenomenon. However, research has tended to focus on exclusi...
The use of indicators and indexes in social policy, as part of evidence-based policy, is understood ...
This article illustrates how the stigmatization of public housing in Australia has been co-constitut...
This dissertation is about territorial stigmatisation and public housing in Sydney, Australia. It dr...
This dissertation presents an historical-sociological study of how governments of the modern western...
Many poor suburbs in Australia with higher than average numbers of public housing tenants do not sim...
Many poor suburbs in Australia with higher than average numbers of public housing tenants do not sim...
This paper considers the problem of stigmatisation towards tenants residing in public housing. It dr...
It is curious that the most frequently reviewed and well thought-out large housing estates are now t...
This paper offers a critical assessment of Loic Wacquant’s influential ‘advanced marginality’ framew...
International audienceThis article introduces the special issue on statactivism, a particular form o...
This article offers a critical assessment of Loic Wacquant’s influential advanced marginality framew...
Literature on territorial stigma, the persistent stigma attached to place, has traditionally accepte...
Loïc Wacquant has made a widely read and debated contribution to critical research on contemporary u...
This paper draws on a multimethod ethnographic study, conducted between 2016 and 2017 in Shirebrook,...
Territorial exclusion is a multi-scalar phenomenon. However, research has tended to focus on exclusi...
The use of indicators and indexes in social policy, as part of evidence-based policy, is understood ...