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Dear Colleagues,

We are seeking abstracts for our session "*Reconstructing the real
estate-finance link: Housing financialization after the crisis*", part of
the RC21 conference to be held in Leeds on 11-13 September, 2017. We
particularly encourage submissions from early career and PhD researchers,
as well as those studying contexts outside the North American-European
heartlands of the 2008 financial crisis.

Abstracts should be sent via email to the RC21 conference organizers (
[log in to unmask]) *and *Desiree Fields ([log in to unmask]), Joe
Beswick ([log in to unmask]), Zac Taylor ([log in to unmask]). T*he deadline
to submit abstracts is 10 March, 2017. *Further guidance on abstract format
may be found at https://rc21leeds2017.wordpress.com/

We would be grateful if you could circulate this CFP to colleagues who may
be interested in participating in this session.

thank you,

Desiree, Joe, and Zac


*Call for Papers*

RC21 CONFERENCE 2017 “Rethinking Urban Global Justice”

11-13 September | University of Leeds, UK |
*https://rc21leeds2017.wordpress.com/
<https://rc21leeds2017.wordpress.com/>*
*Reconstructing the real estate-finance link: Housing financialization
after the crisis*
https://rc21leeds2017.wordpress.com/16-reconstructing-the-real-estate-finance-link-housing-financialization-after-the-crisis/

The treatment of housing as a financial asset helped create the conditions
for the 2008 global financial crisis. Yet restoring the link between
finance and the built environment has also been integral to strategies for
recovering from the crisis. The process of financialization is therefore
ongoing, but its nature is dynamic. In many countries experiencing systemic
housing-financial crises in 2008, for example, the link between finance and
housing is currently being remade across tenure and beyond owner-occupation
through the rental sector. Within this post-crisis landscape, local and
national governments assume complex and varied roles, often enabling or
executing housing financialization. At the same time, housing remains a key
site in struggles for urban justice, illuminating the fault lines and
fragility of financialization.

Though undoubtedly a global process, financialization remains deeply
contingent on local and national contexts; indeed the path of post-crisis
housing financialization outlined above is but one possible trajectory. To
understand the variegated ways the housing-finance link is being
(re)constituted, we seek perspectives from across and beyond the heartlands
of the global financial crisis–including critiques of the very notion of
‘post-crisis’. Comparative, empirically rich, and historically-grounded
approaches are particularly welcome. Contributions from PhD students and
early career scholars encouraged. Papers might address:

   - The reconstruction or reworking of the housing-finance link in
   specific urban and/or national contexts, and the socio-spatial impacts of
   this process;
   - The state as enabler, facilitator, or even executor of housing
   financialization;
   - Financialization across different housing tenures: owner-occupied,
   public and private rental, student, and elderly/care housing;
   - How housing financialization governs people and place, e.g. the making
   of tenants as ‘financial subjects’; Intersections of housing
   financialization with the financialization of other sectors, e.g. of
   infrastructure and climate risk; or
   - Efforts to contest or interrupt financialization, e.g. alternative
   relationships to land and  housing, tenants movements.

-- 

Desiree Fields
Lecturer in Urban Geography
Erasmus and Study Abroad Coordinator
Office hours: Tuesday, 11:00am-12:00pm; Thursday 2:00-4:00pm; by appointment
Phone: +44(0)114 222 7969
Google Scholar: http://bit.ly/dfscholar

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