《Staying in place: narratives of middle-income renter immobility in New York City》
打印
- 作者
- Rebecca Marie Shakespeare
- 来源
- HOUSING STUDIES,Vol.,Issue
- 语言
- 英文
- 关键字
- 作者单位
- Urban and Environmental Policy and Planning, Tufts University, Medford, MA, USA
- 摘要
- Abstract Existing research has enumerated why people move; this article responds to recent calls for increased focus on residential immobility – or staying in place – by focusing on why and how middle-income renters remain immobile as housing costs change around them. This article examines how middle-income renters make sense of housing cost change and their ability to remain in place. Using thirty-two semi-structured interviews with middle-income renters in New York City, this research analyses housing narratives to understand the financial and social complexities of remaining in place. Middle-income renters who are intentionally immobile explain how they stay in their neighbourhood area by making financial trade-offs and negotiating landlord relationships to avoid rent increases. Within a broader narrative of inevitable price displacement, this demonstrates how structural processes of urban housing and urban change manifest in the housing narratives of middle-income renters as they act to defer their own displacement and actively hold their place in changing neighbourhoods.