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Journal ArticleDOI

The Variegated Financialization of Housing

TLDR
There is a small but growing literature on the financialization of housing that demonstrates how housing is a central aspect of financialization as discussed by the authors, but the relations between housing and financialization remain under-researched and under-theorized.
Abstract
There is a small but growing literature on the financialization of housing that demonstrates how housing is a central aspect of financialization. Despite the varied analyses of the financialization of housing and the importance of housing to financialization, the relations between housing and financialization remain under-researched and under-theorized. The financialization of housing is not really a specific form of financialization, transcending as it does a number of different forms of financialization. Housing systems, in particular, vary widely across the globe, which implies that housing financialization will be inherently variegated, path-dependent and uneven. In this introduction to the symposium, I will discuss how the articles to follow contribute to the literature on the financialization of housing. Housing has entered a post-Fordist, neoliberal and financialized regime. Increasingly, both mortgaged homeownership and subsidized rental housing are there to keep financial markets going, rather than being facilitated by those markets. There is little evidence that the global financial crisis has resulted in any de-financialization of housing. There are common trajectories within uneven and variegated financialization, rather than radically different and completely unrelated forms of housing financialization. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

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Journal ArticleDOI

Unwilling Subjects of Financialization

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors focus on the emergence of rental housing as a frontier for financialization, a dynamic that is increasingly relevant since the global financial crisis, focusing on an aggressive wave of investment in affordable rent-stabilized properties by private equity firms and the implications of the 2008 financial crisis for their investment strategies and thus for tenants' experience of home.
Journal ArticleDOI

Demolishing the Present to Sell off the Future? The Emergence of ‘Financialized Municipal Entrepreneurialism’ in London

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors introduce a new mode of urban entrepreneurialism in London through a study of the state-executed, speculative development and financialization of public land, and conclude that any such gains must be set against longer-term financial, democratic and political risks.
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Financial geography II: Financial geographies of housing and real estate:

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors studied residential (housing) and commercial real estate (offices, retail, leisure) at the intersection of financial and urban geographies to understand how the built envi...
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Financial geography III: The financialization of the city:

TL;DR: In this article, the authors discuss the financialization of urban governance and the built environment as an explicit state strategy, focusing on municipal finance and the use of financial products by the local authorities.
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The financialization of a social housing provider

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a case study of the financialization of both housing and the state in the Netherlands, showing that almost half of Dutch housing associations used derivatives, although most refrained from using them purely speculatively, and the largest of them all, Vestia, was an extreme case of what can happen when public goals are left to be realized by inadequately supervised and poorly managed private organizations.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Making sense of financialization

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors evaluate the insights of more than a decade of scholarship on financialization and argue that a deeper understanding of financialization will lead to a better understanding of organized interests, the politics of the welfare state, and processes of institutional change.
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The urban process under capitalism: a framework for analysis

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors discuss a problematique generale for l'interpretation of the processus urbain capitaliste in relation with the lutte de classes.
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Is a Finance-Led Growth Regime a Viable Alternative to Fordism? A Preliminary Analysis

Robert Boyer
- 01 Jan 2000 - 
TL;DR: In this paper, the viability and desirability of a finance-led growth regime is assessed against the historical evidence about the many alternative regimes that have been proposed as successors to Fordism.
Journal ArticleDOI

Privatised Keynesianism: An Unacknowledged Policy Regime

TL;DR: There have now been two successive policy regimes since the Second World War that have temporarily succeeded in reconciling the uncertainties and instabilities of a capitalist economy with democracy's need for stability for people's lives and capitalism's own need for confident mass consumers.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Financialization of Home and the Mortgage Market Crisis

TL;DR: In this article, the authors characterize capital switching from the primary, secondary or tertiary circuit to the quaternary circuit of capital as a transition from a "facilitating market" for homeowners in need of credit to one increasingly facilitating global investment.
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