References
- Aalbers, M. B. (2016) The financialisation of Housing: A Political Economy Approach (New York: Routledge).
- Akers, J., Seymour, E., Butler, D. & Rathke, W. (2019) Liquid tenancy: ‘Post-crisis’ economies of displacement, community organising, and new forms of resistance, Radical Housing Journal, 1, pp. 9–28.
- Anon (2018) Summerhill Parade - who is the mystery landlord? Slumleaks Blog. May 7. Available at https://web.archive.org/web/20201109032049/ https://slumleaks.wordpress.com/2018/05/07/summerhillparade-who-is-the-mystery-landlord/ (accessed 09 November 2020).
- Berardi, F. (2012) The uprising: On poetry and finance (Los Angeles, CA: Semiotext(e)).
- Byrne, M. (2016) Bad banks and the urban political economy of financialization: The resolution of financial–real estate crises and the co-constitution of urban space and finance, City, 20, pp. 685–699.
- Byrne, M. (2019a) Generation rent and the financialization of housing: A comparative exploration of the growth of the private rental sector in Ireland, the UK and Spain, Housing Studies, 35, pp. 723–743.
- Byrne, M. (2019b) The political economy of the ‘residential rent relation’: Antagonism and tenant organising in the irish rental sector, Radical Housing Journal, 1, pp. 9–26.
- Byrne, M. & McArdle, R. (2020) Secure occupancy, power and the landlord-tenant relation: A qualitative exploration of the irish private rental sector, Housing Studies, pp. 1–19. https://doi.org/10.1080/02673037.2020.1803801.
- Di Feliciantonio, C. (2016) Subjectification in times of indebtedness and neoliberal/austerity urbanism: Subjectification in times of indebtedness, Antipode, 48, pp. 1206–1227.
- Di Feliciantonio, C. & O’Callaghan, C. (2020) Struggles over property in the ‘post-political’ era: Notes on the political from Rome and Dublin, Environment and Planning C: Politics and Space, 38, pp. 195–213.
- Farha, L. (2017) Report of the Special Rapporteur on Adequate Housing as a Component of the Right to an Adequate Standard of Living, and on the Right to Non-Discrimination in This Context, No. A_HRC_34_51-EN, Geneva: United Nations.
- Fernandez, R., Hofman, A. & Aalbers, M. B. (2016) London and New York as a safe deposit box for the transnational wealth elite, Environment and Planning A: Economy and Space, 48, pp. 2443–2461.
- Fernandez, R. & Wigger, A. (2016) Lehman brothers in the Dutch Offshore Financial Centre: The role of shadow banking in increasing leverage and facilitating debt, Economy and Society, 45, pp. 407–430.
- Fields, D. (2015) Contesting the financialization of urban space: Community organizations and the struggle to preserve affordable rental housing in New York City, Journal of Urban Affairs, 37, pp. 144–165.
- Fields, D. (2017a) Urban struggles with financialization, Geography Compass, 11, pp. e12334.
- Fields, D. (2017b) Unwilling subjects of financialization, International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, 41, pp. 588–603.
- Fields, D. (2019) Automated landlord: Digital technologies and post-crisis financial accumulation, Environment and Planning A: Economy and Space, pp. 1–22. https://doi.org/10.1177/0308518X19846514.
- Fitzgerald, C. (2017) What has happened to Home Sweet Home (and the €190,000 that was donated)? The Journal. May 2. Available at https://web.archive.org/web/20210119062114/ https://www.thejournal.ie/home-sweet-homemoney-3359321-May2017/ (accessed 09 February 2021).
- García-Lamarca, M. (2017) From occupying plazas to recuperating housing: Insurgent practices in Spain: From occupying plazas to recuperating housing, International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, 41, pp. 37–53.
- Government of Ireland (2018) Design Standards for New Apartments – Guidelines for Planning Authorities. Available at https://web.archive.org/web/20210709012916/https://www.gov.ie/en/publication/15f0b-design-standards-for-new-apartments-dsfna-2018/ (accessed 9 July 2021).
- Gurran, N., Maalsen, S. & Shrestha, P. (2020) Is ‘informal’ housing an affordability solution for expensive cities? Evidence from Sydney, Australia, International Journal of Housing Policy, pp. 1–24.
- Harvey, D. (2001) Globalization and the ‘spatial fix’, Geographische Revue, 3, pp. 23–30.
- Hearne, R. (2017) A Home or a Wealth Generator? Inequality, financialisation and the Irish Housing Crisis (Dublin: TASC).
- Hearne, R. (2020) Housing Shock: The Irish housing crisis and how to solve it (Bristol: Policy Press).
- Hearne, R. (2021) The government does not want you to be able to afford to buy a home, The Journal. Available at https://web.archive.org/web/20210505163449/ https://www.thejournal.ie/readme/irelandinvestment-housing-5428746-May2021/ (accessed 05 May 2021).
- Hearne, R., O’Callaghan, C., Di Feliciantonio, C. & Kitchin, R. (2018) The relational articulation of housing crisis and activism, in: N. Gray (Ed), Rent and Its Discontents: A Century of Housing Struggle, pp. 153–167. (London: Rowman & Littlefield International).
- Hulse, K., Reynolds, M. & Martin, C. (2019) The everyman archetype: Discursive reframing of private landlords in the financialization of rental housing, Housing Studies, 35, pp. 923–981.
- Leszczynski, A. (2015) Spatial media/tion, Progress in Human Geography, 39, pp. 729–751.
- Lima, V. (2021) From housing crisis to housing justice: Towards a radical right to a home, Urban Studies, 58, pp. 3282–3298.
- Maalsen, S. (2020) ‘Generation share’: Digitalised geographies of shared housing, Social & Cultural Geography, 21, pp. 105–113.
- Maalsen, S. (2021) The Hack: What it is and why it matters to urban studies, Urban Studies, pp. 1–13.
- Murphy, L. (2020) Performing calculative practices: Residual valuation, the residential development process and affordable housing, Housing Studies, 35, pp. 1501–1517.
- NAMA (2012) 2012 Annual Report and Financial Statements (Dublin: National Asset Management Agency).
- Nethercote, M. (2020) Build-to-rent and the financialization of rental housing: Future research directions, Housing Studies, 35, pp. 839–874.
- Nowicki, M., Brickell, K. & Harris, E. (2019) The hotelisation of the housing crisis: Experiences of family homelessness in Dublin hotels, The Geographical Journal, 185, pp. 313–324.
- O’Callaghan, C., Di Feliciantonio, C. & Byrne, M. (2018) Governing urban vacancy in post-crash Dublin: Contested property and alternative social projects, Urban Geography, 39, pp. 868–891.
- Parés, M. (2019) Socially innovative housing activism: Local context and collective leadership practices in Barcelona and New York City, Housing Studies, 34, pp. 1654–1672.
- Porter, L., Fields, D., Landau-Ward, A., Rogers, D., Sadowski, J., Maalsen, S., Kitchin, R., Dawkins, O., Young, G. & Bates, L.K. (2019) Planning, land and housing in the digital data revolution/the politics of digital transformations of housing/digital innovations, PropTech and housing – The view from Melbourne/digital housing and renters: Disrupting the Australian rental bond system and tenant advocacy/prospects for an intelligent planning system/what are the prospects for a politically intelligent Planning system?, Planning Theory & Practice, 20, pp. 575–603.
- Rogers, D. (2017) The geopolitics of real estate: Reconfiguring property, capital, and rights. (London: Rowman & Littlefield International).
- Shaw, J. (2020) Platform real estate: Theory and practice of new urban real estate markets, Urban Geography, 41, pp. 1028–1037.
- Soaita, A. M., Searle, B. A., McKee, K. & Moore, T. (2017) Becoming a landlord: Strategies of property-based welfare in the private rental sector in Great Britain, Housing Studies, 32, pp. 613–637.
- Unlock NAMA (2012) Unlock NAMA campaign launched in Ireland, International Alliance of Inhabitants Blog, January 31. Available at: https://web.archive.org/web/20211113185305/ https://ita.habitants.org/notizie/abitanti_d_europa/lanciata_in_irlanda_la_campagna_unlock_nama/%28language%29/eng-GB (accessed 13 November 2021).
- Waldron, R. (2019) Financialisation, urban governance and the planning system: Utilizing ‘development viability’ as a policy narrative for the liberalization of Ireland’s post-crash planning system, International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, 43, pp. 685–704.
- Yrigoy, I. (2018) State-led financial regulation and representations of spatial fixity: The example of the Spanish real estate sector, International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, 42, pp. 594–611.