44
Views
49
CrossRef citations to date
0
Altmetric
Original Articles

Gentrification, Socioeconomic Change, and the Geography of Displacement

REFERENCES

  • Badcock, B. (1989). An Australian view of the rent gap hypothesis. Annals of the Association of American Geographers, 79, 125–145.
  • Berry, B. J. L. (1985). Islands of renewal in seas of decay. In P. Peterson (ed.), The new urban reality, pp. 69–96, Washington, B.C.: Brookings Institute.
  • Bondi, L. (1991). Gender divisions and gentrification: a critique. Transactions-Institute of British Geographers, 16, 190–198.
  • Bourne, L. S. (1977). Perspectives on the inner city: its changing character, reasons for decline and revival. Toronto: University of Toronto, Centre for Urban and Community Studies, Research Paper No. 94.
  • Britten, N., & Heath, A. (1983). Women, men and social class. In E. Gamarnikow, et al. (Eds.), Gender, class and work. London: Heinemann.
  • Bruegel, I., Lyons, M., & Perrons, D. (1995). Feminization, professionalization, and polarization in London, 1971–1993. Paper presented to ESRC sponsored London Seminar, London, July 1995.
  • Butler, T., & Hamnett, C. (1994). Gentrification, class and gender: some comments on Ward’s “Gentrification as Consumption”. Environment and Planning D: Society and Space, 12, 477–493.
  • Clark, E. (1988). The rent gap and transformation of the built environment in Malmo 1860–1985. Geografiska Annaler B, 70, 241–254.
  • Clark, E. (1991). Rent gaps or value gaps: complementary or contradictory? In J. van Weesep, J. & S. Musterd, (Eds.), Urban housing for the better off: gentrification in Europe, pp. 17–29. Utrecht: Stedelijke Netwerken.
  • Dale, A. (1983). Social class and the self-employed. Sociology, 20, 430–434.
  • Dangschatt, J. (1989). Gentrification mode in Europe—a comparison of Britain, the Netherlands and W. Germany with some assumptions for E. Europe. Paper presented at International Research Conference on Social Theory and the Production of the Built Environment, Noszvaj.
  • Dangschatt, J. (1991). Gentrification in Hamburg. In J. van Weesep & S. Musterd, (Eds.), Urban housing for the better off: gentrification in Europe, pp. 63–88, Utrecht: Stedlijke Netwerken.
  • Fielding, A. J. (1989). Inter-regional migration and social change: studies based upon the OPCS longitudinal study 1971–1981. Paper presented at the ESRC seminar on the OPCS Longitudinal Study, University of Manchester, November 1989.
  • Fielding, A. (1991). Migration and social mobility: south east England as an escalator region, Regional studies, 26, 1–15.
  • Gelb, J., & Lyons, M. (1993). A tale of two cities: housing policy and gentrification in London and New York. Journal of Urban Affairs, 15, 345–366.
  • Glass, R. (1964). London: aspects of change. London: MacGibbon and Kee, Centre for Urban Studies.
  • Glass, R., & Westergaard, J. (1965). London’s housing needs. London: University College London, Centre for Urban Studies.
  • Goldethorpe, J. H. (1983). Women and class analysis: in defence of the conventional view. Sociology, 17, 465–488.
  • Hamnett, C. (1973). Improvement grants as an indicator of gentrification in London, Area, 5, 252–261.
  • Hamnett, C. (1987). A tale of two cities: socio-tenurial polarization in London and the Southeast, 1966–1981. Environment and Planning A, 19, 537–556.
  • Hamnett, C. (1990). Migration and residential social change: out of and within London, 1971–1981. Revue de Geographie de Lyon, 65, 155–163.
  • Hamnett, C. (1991). The blind men and the elephant: the explanation of gentrification. Transactions- Institute of British Geographers, 16, 173–189.
  • Hamnett, C., & Randolph, B. (1986). Tenurial transformation and the flat break-up market in London: the British condo experience. In N. Smith & P. Williams, (Eds.), Gentrification of the city, pp. 121–152. Winchester, MA: Allen and Unwin.
  • Hamnett, C., & Williams, P. (1980). Social change in London: a study of gentrification. Urban Affairs Quarterly, 15, 469–487.
  • Jager, M. (1986). Class definition and the esthetics of gentrification: Victoriana in Melbourne. In N. Smith & P. Williams, (Eds.), Gentrification of the city, pp. 78–91. Boston: Allen & Unwin.
  • Kerstein, R. (1990). Stage models of gentrification—an examination. Urban Affairs Quarterly, 25, 620–639.
  • Lees, L. (1994). Rethinking gentrification: beyond the positions of economics or culture. Process in Human Geography, 18, 137–150.
  • Legates, R., & Hartman, C. (1986). The anatomy of displacement in the United States. In N. Smith, and P. Williams, (Eds.), Gentrification of the city, pp. 178–203. Boston: Allen and Unwin.
  • Ley, D. (1988). Social upgrading in six Canadian inner cities. Canadian Geographer, 32, 31–45.
  • Lyons, M. (1993). Gentrification in context. London: South Bank University, unpublished doctoral dissertation.
  • Lyons, M. (1996a). Gentrification and migration, the links in London 1971–1981. In P. Hall, et al., (Eds.), Migration and European cities. London: Bellhaven (forthcoming).
  • Lyons, M. (1996b). Inmigration, gentrification and neighbourhood change in London: can they inform theoretical debate? In J. van Weesep, J. Dangschatt, & S. Musterd, (Eds.), Gentrification in Europe (forthcoming).
  • MacManus, S. A. (1988). The missing element: an examination of analytic time frames. Urban Affairs Quarterly, 24, 39–45.
  • Marcuse, P. (1986). Abandonment, gentrification and displacement—the linkages in New York City. In N. Smith & P. Williams, (Eds.), Gentrification of the city, pp. 153–177. Boston: Allen & Unwin.
  • Munt, I. (1987) Economic restructuring, culture and gentrification—a case study in Battersea, London. Environment and Planning A, 19, 1157–1197.
  • Palen, J., & London, B. (Eds.) (1984). Gentrification, displacement and neighborhood revitalization. Albany, NY: State University of New York Press.
  • Pitt, J. (1977). Gentrification in Islington. London: Barnsbury Peoples’ Forum.
  • Power, A. (1973). David and Goliath. London: Holloway Neighborhood Law Centre, Barnsbury.
  • Runciman, W. G. (1990). How many classes are there in British society? Sociology, 24, 377–395.
  • Segal, D. (Ed.) (1989). The economics of neighborhood. New York: Academic Press.
  • Sennet, R. (1970). The uses of disorder: personal identity and city life. New York: Knopf.
  • Sennet, R. (1979). The uses of disorders, personal identity, and the city life. New York: Knopf.
  • Smith, N. (1986). Gentrification and the frontier, and the restructuring of urban space. In N. Smith & P. Williams, (Eds.), Gentrification of the city, pp 15–34. Winchester, MA: Allen & Unwin.
  • Smith, N. (1991). Blind man’s buff, or Hamnett’s philosophical individualism in search of gentrification, Commentary. Annals of the Association of American Geographers, 81, 110–115.
  • Smith, N., & Williams, P. (Eds.) (1986). Gentrification of the City. Winchester, MA: Allen & Unwin.
  • Williams, P. (1976). The role of institutions in the private housing market: a general introduction. Working Paper No. 39. Birmingham: University of Birmingham, CURS.
  • Williams, P. (1978). Building socieities and the inner city. Transactions-Institute of British Geographers, 3, 23–34.
  • Williams, P. (1986). Class constitution through spatial reconstruction? A re-evauationa of gentrification in Australia, Britain and the United States. In N. Smith & P. Williams, (Eds.), Gentrification of the city, pp. 56–77. Winchester, MA: Allen & Unwin.

Reprints and Corporate Permissions

Please note: Selecting permissions does not provide access to the full text of the article, please see our help page How do I view content?

To request a reprint or corporate permissions for this article, please click on the relevant link below:

Academic Permissions

Please note: Selecting permissions does not provide access to the full text of the article, please see our help page How do I view content?

Obtain permissions instantly via Rightslink by clicking on the button below:

If you are unable to obtain permissions via Rightslink, please complete and submit this Permissions form. For more information, please visit our Permissions help page.