This article tracks how a trope of middle-class household thrift, grounded on the autarchic Aristotelian oikos, has long fuelled derogatory discourses in Britain aimed at low-income urban residents who practise quite different forms of thrift. Since the 1970s this trope has migrated across scales, proving a potent metaphor for national economic policy and planetary care alike, morally and economically justifying both neoliberal welfare retraction compounded by austerity policies and national responses to excessive resource extraction and waste production. Both austerity and formal recycling schemes shift responsibility onto consumer citizens, regardless of capacity. Further, this model of thrift eclipses the thriftiness of low income urban ...
This paper moves beyond conceptualisations of austerity as a fiscal policy towards understanding aus...
This is an accepted manuscript of an article published by Policy Press in Journal of Poverty and So...
This article uses the United Kingdom as a case study to explore the limits of financialisation. It m...
Struggles over housing are one of the most pressing social, economic and political issues of our tim...
There is a substantial body of scholarship on the role of discourses in producing the neoliberal pol...
From SAGE Publishing via Jisc Publications RouterHistory: epub 2021-06-18Publication status: Publish...
This article tracks housing protests in Kazakhstan’s former capital city, Almaty, from 1989 to 2016 ...
This paper provides a critique of the concept of the throwaway society. Drawing on two years of inte...
One of the hallmarks of the austerity agenda in the UK has been the discursive prevalence of both sc...
Homeownership rates have declined in several countries including Denmark and Turkey since 2010. A ma...
This article uses the lens of moral economies to examine the everyday experience of eviction, precar...
Child poverty remains high on the UK political agenda. This paper informs these debates by examining...
This article explores how far estate management and institutional constraints help to explain the tr...
This article provides a qualified defence of economic indicators of human well being. Purchasing pow...
This paper provides a geographical analysis of divestment. Drawing on two years of intensive qualita...
This paper moves beyond conceptualisations of austerity as a fiscal policy towards understanding aus...
This is an accepted manuscript of an article published by Policy Press in Journal of Poverty and So...
This article uses the United Kingdom as a case study to explore the limits of financialisation. It m...
Struggles over housing are one of the most pressing social, economic and political issues of our tim...
There is a substantial body of scholarship on the role of discourses in producing the neoliberal pol...
From SAGE Publishing via Jisc Publications RouterHistory: epub 2021-06-18Publication status: Publish...
This article tracks housing protests in Kazakhstan’s former capital city, Almaty, from 1989 to 2016 ...
This paper provides a critique of the concept of the throwaway society. Drawing on two years of inte...
One of the hallmarks of the austerity agenda in the UK has been the discursive prevalence of both sc...
Homeownership rates have declined in several countries including Denmark and Turkey since 2010. A ma...
This article uses the lens of moral economies to examine the everyday experience of eviction, precar...
Child poverty remains high on the UK political agenda. This paper informs these debates by examining...
This article explores how far estate management and institutional constraints help to explain the tr...
This article provides a qualified defence of economic indicators of human well being. Purchasing pow...
This paper provides a geographical analysis of divestment. Drawing on two years of intensive qualita...
This paper moves beyond conceptualisations of austerity as a fiscal policy towards understanding aus...
This is an accepted manuscript of an article published by Policy Press in Journal of Poverty and So...
This article uses the United Kingdom as a case study to explore the limits of financialisation. It m...