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Full Description
This book aims to draw careful distinctions between the various forms of housing insecurity and personal circumstances research participants experience. While the urgency of the housing crisis in the US has produced a lot of scholarly work on housing, it often fails to recount the real life struggles that the housing crisis is causing. This is where the book provides a distinct contribution to housing studies and urban geography. The author use of trust as an analytical lens, her qualitative approach, and her work with people on the ground aim to move away from a quantitative understanding of the crisis by giving it a human face. The author seeks to bring to light the human costs of the destruction of home as well as the political reactions and day-to-day strategies that residents apply to make ends meet in times of the US housing crisis.
Contents
Introduction.- Trust as a spatial concept for urban studies.- Home and housing as spatialized trust.- Researching home and trust relations - Methodological suggestions and practical implications.- A brief history of housing in The USA.- The disruption of trust and trust Networks: Tracing residents' struggles on the housing markets in Atlanta, New Orleans, and Washington, DC.- The pervasiveness of distrust on the housing market: Analyzing interactions between residents and housing institutions.- People power, tenant power! - Rebuilding trust through right to housing movements and activism.- Home, trust, and the right to the city - Concluding remarks.