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Dear All,

Hope this finds you well and sorry for any cross postings. A quick reminder
regarding the upcoming seminar on rent. Please find the details below and
join us if your schedules permit.

Best wishes,
Preeti


SEMINAR

The Rent Relation and Struggles over Distribution in the 21st Century

May 25 2022 8-10:30 am EST / 1-3:30pm GMT / 2-4:30pm SAST / 5:30pm-8:00pm
IST

Zoom Registration Link: Seminar on Rent
<https://zoom.us/meeting/register/tJEpf-Goqz4jHdai5VI14YPPhg4FaZMkm_RY>

Rent shapes the millennial geography of struggles over land and its more
than human affordances. Rent emerges as an attribute of private property
entitlements that are pivotal to capital. Appropriated in the moment of
distribution, rent is nevertheless fundamental to coordinating the flows of
value through the moments of production, circulation and consumption.
Assetization of land and its affordances enables the appropriation of rent
through wide-ranging investments in real estate, infrastructure,
agriculture and extractive industry, in turn impacting access to housing,
livelihoods, food security and multispecies life. State agencies across the
world are instrumental to facilitating these investments through direct
consolidation of land, or through enabling legal frameworks. How do we
understand the growing role of rent in millennial capitalist accumulation?
Is there a fundamental contradiction between the moment of production and
the moment of distribution that the rent relation engenders and must
contain for ongoing accumulation? Are rentier appropriations new, or how
are they specific to this historical conjuncture of accumulation? How do
they unleash speculative spirals, financial crises, ghost cities and failed
infrastructure projects across variegated contexts? What is their role in
reinforcing inequalities (or enabling contingent solidarities) along race,
caste, class, gender, ethnicity and other power differences? What lessons
do contemporary struggles against dispossession, over land, housing,
livelihoods, food security and multi-species life hold, for understanding
the geography of rent? This seminar addresses some preliminary questions
around the millennial geography of rent and accumulation.

Speakers

Erik Swyngedouw (University of Manchester), Moderator

“The Shitty Business of Rent”: An introduction

The Marxist and post-marxist analysis of the rent question has plagued
political-economic and political-ecological analysis for a long time. No
wonder Marx referred to it as ‘the shitty business of rent’. In this
introduction, I will chart the contours of the rent problematic, the
central place it takes in contemporary political-economic and
political-ecological relations, and focus on the social struggles that
unfold around the rent nexus. I will then introduce the speakers in the
seminar.

Manuel Aalbers (KU Leuven)

Land rent and wealth-driven housing dynamics

Land rent drives inequality. This has always been the case, but in this
presentation I will look into one new and one not so new way in which this
is the case. The new way is that short-term rentals, enabled through
digital platforms such as airbnb, drive up rents and tenant displacement.
This is enabled through ‘tourism rent’, which mixes elements of the
classical forms of rent. The not so new way is that the finance-driven
house price increases have led to wealth-driven home and buy-to-let
purchases. Of course, wealth has always driven house and rental prices, but
the exact way in which this happens in the (post-)debt period has shifted.

Callum Ward (London School of Economics; with Frances Brill, University of
Cambridge)

How to Make a City into a Firetrap: Relations of Land and Property in the
UK’s Cladding Scandal

In the aftermath of the 2017 Grenfell fire it was found that buildings
across the UK were covered in flammable cladding and had other structural
safety issues. Assumed liable for remedial costs that in many cases have
not been assessed, many leaseholders have found themselves stuck in
uninsurable, and therefore unsellable, potentially fire-prone units. In
this paper, we analyse how the property relations between leaseholder and
freeholder within a neoliberal context dominated by extractive rentiers has
created this situation. We trace the relationship between the structure of
landed property, financialised value-extraction, and socio-materialities of
the built environment to understand how Britain’s system of housing
provision has turned sections of the UK property market into literal
fire-traps. In doing so, we point to a need to understand the
institutionalised chain of rent-seekers ‘value grabbing’ if we are to
understand social murder through unsafe housing conditions.

Preeti Sampat (Ambedkar University Delhi)

The Caste of Rent

Rent is often discussed as a secular distribution relation in the
accumulation cycle. As an attribute of propertized land however, it is
fundamentally tied to historical social relations of colonialism, race,
ethnicity, gender, religion and in the case of India, caste. These
relations mediate the ownership of land and its affordances, including real
estate and rent. With an ethnographic vignette from the upcoming
‘greenfield’ Dholera smart city in Gujarat, India, I discuss the caste
relations of rent through propertized land. Dholera indexes the
contradictions of accumulation in India’s economic growth at several
registers; and fosters contingent solidarities across historical
inequalities among those resisting the project.

Kai Bosworth (Virginia Commonwealth University)

Comparative and differential rents in agriculture and oil transportation:
Revisiting the spatial contradictions of capital

The extraction of rents is a comparative and differential exercise. The
contradiction in space that can be found in the oil industry, Mazan Labban
(2008) has influentially argued, stems from the difference in access and
control faced by landed and circulating capital. Though this contradiction
could be emblematic of broader trends in the relationship between finance,
extraction, and logistics/infrastructure (Mezzadra and Neilson 2019,
Arboleda 2020), this talk focuses on a smaller but no less emblematic
dimension: the comparative exercise that agricultural landowners undertake
when evaluating pipeline easements. Landowners' understandings of the
profit they can extract from space is mediated by rent, but evaluation of
rent enfolds a complicated material ecology: winter wheat, ground heat,
insect hatching times, clay byproducts, and topsoil layers. As a mediating
force, rent can thus either exacerbate or resolve this spatial
contradiction, albeit only temporarily.

Alex Loftus (King's College London)

Value-rent-finance in the financialization of water infrastructure

Building on Purcell et al (2020), I will explore the internal relations
between value, rent, and finance as a way of interpreting the process often
referred to as financialization. Crucially, by viewing value, rent, and
finance as internally related, it becomes possible to develop conversations
between Marxist critiques of capitalism and the environment, and more
recent work on the financialization of nature. I will then go on to apply
this framework to an interpretation of financialized water provision in
London, and the construction of major new infrastructure projects on the
River Thames.


-- 
Dr. Preeti Sampat
USF International Fellow
<https://www.urbanstudiesfoundation.org/funding/grantees/dr-preeti-sampat/>
Assistant Professor in Sociology
<https://aud.ac.in/faculty/dr-preeti-sampat>
School of Liberal Studies
Dr. B. R. Ambedkar University Delhi

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