Political Economy of Land

Political Economy of Land

Rent, Financialization and Resistance

Beauregard, Robert; Hyoetylaeinen, Mika

Taylor & Francis Ltd

05/2024

252

Mole

9781032248202

Pré-lançamento - envio 15 a 20 dias após a sua edição

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Introduction: The Political Economy of Land

Part I: The Assetization of Land and Buildings

1. Land as a Financial Asset: The Theory of Urban Rent as a Mirror of Economic Transformation

2. Land as an Asset

3. Buildings as Financial Assets

Part II: Rent, Real Estate, and Property Markets

4. The Risk Myth: Blackstone, Housing and Rentier Capitalism

5. The Political Economy of Abandoned Property: Structure and Agency in Land Banking Practice in Muncie, Indiana

6. The Political Economy of Italian Public Real Estate Privatization: Austerity, Financialization and the "Enrichment Economy"

7. The Singapore and Hong Kong Property Markets: Lessons for the West from Successful Global Cities

Part III: Land and Social Relations

8. Land Relations in Turmoil: Trans-Local Constructions of Home Among Rural Migrants to Xiamen, China

9. Bridging Between Owners and Users in Japan's Private Property Regime: The Case of Farmland Banking

10. Unauthorized Neighborhoods, Land Rent, and Working-Class Struggles in Indian Cities: The Slum Question Revisited

11. Public Land as a Social Relation: The Case of East River Park in New York City

12. Land Rent and the Struggle for the Urban Commons in Helsinki's Suvilahti DIY Skatepark

Conclusion: A Summary from the Perspective of Rent Theory
Public Land Privatization;Community Development Corporation;Young Men;Exclusion Rights;Social Reproduction;Single Family Rental;Public Administrations;Low Income Housing Tax Credit;Delaware County;Tax Delinquent Properties;Public Real Estate;Land Rent;Fictitious Capital;Abandoned Property;Urban Commons;Public Review Process;Tax Lien;Tax Forfeiture;Rural Migrants;Absolute Rent;Capital Accumulation Strategies;Land Bank;Permanent Austerity;UK Tax;Real Estate Surpluses