Print

Print


*Call for abstracts* (EURA - UUA Conference, June 20-22, 2019 | Dublin
(Ireland) | http://cityfutures2019.com/)

"Inhabiting outside the law: the variety of housing informality/illegality
in Western countries"
Organized by Francesco Chiodelli, Alessandro Coppola and Margherita
Grazioli (GSSI, L'Aquila)
Deadline: 25 October 2019

When dealing with ‘Western countries’ (or the so-called ‘Global North’),
housing informality/illegality is usually associated mainly (if not
exclusively) with minorities and marginalized groups (such as Roma people
or refugees living in unauthorised camps that cannot afford, or access,
either the privatised housing market, or residual social housing based on
their status, income, or restrictive housing regulations. Nevertheless,
recent research in the field of social, urban and geographic studies is
elaborating an innovative epistemology of these forms of “inhabiting
outside the law’, based on the diversified phenomenology that can be
observed within cityscapes as well as non-urban areas. These forms of
informal/illegal housing can be enacted by individuals, groups of people
clustered according to kinship or ethnicity, with the cooperation of social
urban movements, or even under the management of criminal organisations.
Among those can be counted: squatting of private and public empty
buildings; illegal occupation of social housing flats; the construction of
unauthorized secondary residencies, or ‘autonomous’ enlargement of primary
ones; residential use of non-residential spaces. On top of that, Southern
European countries such as Italy and Greece are experiencing unlawful forms
of housing managed by mob organisations. Conversely, a likewise diversified
range of policy responses can be observed according to the situated and
contingent arrangement of where they occur: from processes of planning
formalization to national amnesties throughout hard-nosed government
interventions aimed at contrasting the proliferation of informal housing
and settlements.
Recent studies are also emphasising the connection between housing
informality/illegality, the post-2008 austerity management of housing and
welfare, as well as their connection with other crises (such as the border
management and migration one), while scrutinising the disruption they
represent towards different regulatory regimes (e.g. (e.g. urban planning
regulations, building regulations, property rights, public housing rules of
access). Given this analytical and empirical complexity, the session aims
to trigger a debate that could provide a comprehensive framing (e.g. a
typology or an epistemologically rigorous taxonomy) of the different forms
of housing informality/illegality practised in Western countries. The
contributors are asked to focus on their features in terms of background,
causes, and policy responses. A diverse range of potential contributions is
welcome, such as: qualitative, critical explorations of specific, local
case-studies; national and cross-national comparative overviews;
quantitative, geo-spatial accounts and analyses; critical discussions of
causal factors and policy responses.

How to submit abstracts: Abstract proposals (from 150 to 300 words) must be
sent (together with a short bio [around 100 words] of the author/s) to
[log in to unmask], [log in to unmask]  and
[log in to unmask] by October 25, 2018.
The acceptance of the proposal will be notified by October 29, and
submitted on the EURA-UUA conference website by November 1.

-- 
----------
Francesco Chiodelli
Associate professor in urban planning
Deputy-coordinator of the doctoral programme in Urban Studies and Regional
Science
Gran Sasso Science Institute
viale Francesco Crispi 7, L'Aquila (Italy)

mob  +39 328 9528130
skype  francesco.chiodelli
Website <http://www.lessisless.it> ; Researchgate
<http://www.researchgate.net/profile/Francesco_Chiodelli> ; Academia
<http://infn.academia.edu/FrancescoChiodelli> ; Twitter
<https://twitter.com/franchiodelli>

NEW BOOK! The Illicit and Illegal in Regional and Urban Governance and
Development
<https://www.routledge.com/The-Illicit-and-Illegal-in-Regional-and-Urban-Governance-and-Development/Chiodelli-Hall-Hudson/p/book/9781138230644>(with
T. Hall and R. Hudson; Routledge, 2018)

NEW PAPERS!
The illicit side of urban development: Corruption and organised crime in
the field of urban planning <http://ow.ly/H77R30k1wbG>. *Urban Studies*,
2018 [onlinefirst]
The transfer of development rights in the midst of the economic crisis:
potential, innovation and limits in Italy
<https://authors.elsevier.com/a/1WMmsyDvM44c3>.* Land Use Policy*, 72,
2018, pp. 381-388 (with E. Falco)

LATEST MONOGRAPH: Shaping Jerusalem. Spatial planning, politics and the
conflict
<http://www.routledge.com/Shaping-Jerusalem-Spatial-planning-politics-and-the-conflict/Chiodelli/p/book/9781138185494>
(Routledge,
2017)

########################################################################

To unsubscribe from the CRIT-GEOG-FORUM list, click the following link:
https://www.jiscmail.ac.uk/cgi-bin/webadmin?SUBED1=CRIT-GEOG-FORUM&A=1