peer reviewedThis paper’s main argument is that housing financialisation can be understood as a set of intertwined digital/material processes, and that resisting housing financialisation requires activism that recognises and capitalises on this dynamic. Drawing from Desiree Fields’ (2017a) work on urban struggles with financialisation, this conceptual argument is unpacked through a case study of post-crash Dublin, an urban space reshaped by housing financialisation and struggles resisting it. Housing has been a key subject of contention in post-crash Dublin and activists’ digital/material struggles illustrate how digital technologies and platforms can be and are appropriated to resist housing financialisation. The paper traces the intertwin...
In this paper we provide an overarching analysis of housing in Ireland from 1993-2014, examining tre...
Social and economic change in the built environment is increasingly driven by processes of dataficat...
This paper examines variations in residents' responses to proposals to redevelop three public housin...
peer reviewedThis paper adopts an empirical focus on the everyday practices of Take Back the City, a...
This article centers the role of digital technologies in extending financial accumulation into new s...
This article examines the politicized discourse employed by housing movement to shift long-standing ...
The eruption of disruptive digital platforms is reshaping geographies of housing under the gaze of c...
The language of networks has become a common conceptual framework for describing contemporary, digit...
This paper explores the responses to the housing crisis in Dublin, Ireland, by analysing recent hous...
This paper explores the responses to the housing crisis in Dublin, Ireland, by analysing recent hous...
This paper argues, however, that the economic role of social housing has been fundamentally transfor...
The pace and scope of digital innovation targeting the real estate industry has intensified over the...
This paper explores how grassroots activists made use of social media during the water protests in t...
The recent economic crisis has demonstrated the extent to which households are exposed to the finan...
First published online: 16 October 2019The global financial crisis has ushered in a major housing cr...
In this paper we provide an overarching analysis of housing in Ireland from 1993-2014, examining tre...
Social and economic change in the built environment is increasingly driven by processes of dataficat...
This paper examines variations in residents' responses to proposals to redevelop three public housin...
peer reviewedThis paper adopts an empirical focus on the everyday practices of Take Back the City, a...
This article centers the role of digital technologies in extending financial accumulation into new s...
This article examines the politicized discourse employed by housing movement to shift long-standing ...
The eruption of disruptive digital platforms is reshaping geographies of housing under the gaze of c...
The language of networks has become a common conceptual framework for describing contemporary, digit...
This paper explores the responses to the housing crisis in Dublin, Ireland, by analysing recent hous...
This paper explores the responses to the housing crisis in Dublin, Ireland, by analysing recent hous...
This paper argues, however, that the economic role of social housing has been fundamentally transfor...
The pace and scope of digital innovation targeting the real estate industry has intensified over the...
This paper explores how grassroots activists made use of social media during the water protests in t...
The recent economic crisis has demonstrated the extent to which households are exposed to the finan...
First published online: 16 October 2019The global financial crisis has ushered in a major housing cr...
In this paper we provide an overarching analysis of housing in Ireland from 1993-2014, examining tre...
Social and economic change in the built environment is increasingly driven by processes of dataficat...
This paper examines variations in residents' responses to proposals to redevelop three public housin...