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Autor(en) / Beteiligte
Titel
Globalization and Dynamics of Urban Production
Auflage
1st ed
Ort / Verlag
Newark : John Wiley & Sons, Incorporated,
Erscheinungsjahr
2024
Link zum Volltext
Beschreibungen/Notizen
  • Cover -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Contents -- Introduction -- I.1. Market finance's stranglehold on the city -- I.2. Diversity of modes of capital accumulation in real estate -- I.3. What are the consequences for contemporary capitalisms? -- I.4. References -- Part 1. Sectoral Reconfigurations of Property Markets and Urban (Re)Development -- Chapter 1. The Financialized City and the Extraction of Urban Rent -- 1.1. Institutionalization of direct connections between the urban built environment and financial markets -- 1.1.1. Securitization as a connector from the urban built environment to market finance -- 1.1.2. The consolidation of the driving role of the urban built environment thanks to connections to global investment circuits -- 1.1.3. Space at the heart of the valorization and extraction of value by the Global City -- 1.2. Territorialized chains of financialized urban production: a transcalary and multiactor re-intermediation -- 1.2.1. Financialization through the extraction of urban rent by financial landowners -- 1.2.2. Financialization through the extraction of urban rent via household property -- 1.2.3. The financialization of urban development strategies through municipal land -- 1.3. Conclusion -- 1.4. References -- Chapter 2. Real Estate Developers: Coordinating Actors in the Production of the City -- 2.1. The real estate developer, a multi-faceted player -- 2.1.1. What is a real estate developer? -- 2.1.2. The diversity of real estate developer profiles -- 2.2. The changing role of real estate developers: between market and politics -- 2.2.1. Is financialization (re)shaping real estate developers? -- 2.2.2. How (and why) do developers integrate "social" objectives? -- 2.2.3. Are environmental issues transforming the practices of real estate developers? -- 2.3. References.
  • Chapter 3. Housing, Ownership, Assets and Debt: Geographical Approaches -- 3.1. Introduction: a renewed interest in housing finance and home ownership -- 3.2. Is residential real estate becoming a financialized asset? -- 3.2.1. Geographical approaches to the financialization of real estate -- 3.2.2. Property and inflationary mechanisms -- 3.2.3. Asset-based welfare -- 3.3. Geographical analysis of property market regimes -- 3.3.1. The value of property in space, renewal of a critical analysis -- 3.3.2. The limits of classical approaches to prices in the city -- 3.3.3. Market regimes -- 3.4. Property and socio-spatial segregation -- 3.4.1. The role of credit and intermediation in inequality and segregation -- 3.4.2. The new market mechanisms, a strengthening of the relationship between property and inequality -- 3.4.3. Sharing ownership -- 3.5. Conclusion -- 3.6. References -- Chapter 4. Logistics Urbanization, Between Real Estate Financialization and the Rise of Logistics Urban Planning -- 4.1. Introduction -- 4.2. Logistics development in the outer-suburbs: a dynamic of sprawl and financialization of logistics real estate -- 4.2.1. An increase in the number of warehouses to supply major cities -- 4.2.2. The logistics sprawl of metropolitan areas on a global scale -- 4.2.3. Financialized production of outer-suburban logistics zones -- 4.2.4. The challenges of regulating the diffuse urbanization of economic activities -- 4.3. Logistics development in urban centers: urban logistics -- 4.3.1. The rise of logistics real estate in urban centers: urban logistics facilities -- 4.3.2. Towards a logistics urban planning -- 4.3.3. The rise of a logistics real estate market in urban centers -- 4.4. Logistics spaces in the inner suburbs: the case of intermediate logistics as a blind spot in logistics urban planning.
  • 4.4.1. Permanence and mutations of intermediate logistics activities in the suburbs -- 4.4.2. Intermediate logistics, a blind spot in public policy -- 4.5. Conclusion -- 4.6. References -- Chapter 5. The City-Port Relationship in the Metropolitan Fabric -- 5.1. The shift in city-port relations and the reconfiguration of intra-urban scales -- 5.2. The levels of the port metropolis -- 5.2.1. The terminalization movement -- 5.2.2. The docklandization movement -- 5.3. The city-port interfaces, support for major urban projects -- 5.3.1. Standardization versus differentiation (forms/functions) -- 5.4. Who governs the port metropolis? -- 5.5. Conclusion: "Creating the city with the port?" The agenda of the port metropolis -- 5.6. References -- Part 2. Regional Dynamics of Capital Accumulation in East Asian, Middle Eastern and West African Real Estate Markets -- Chapter 6. Land Value Capture and Its Large-Scale Application in Northeast Asia -- 6.1. Introduction -- 6.2. Origins and contemporary forms of LVC -- 6.2.1. Circulation of LVC models between the West and the East -- 6.2.2. Contemporary approaches to LVC -- 6.3. LVC strategies in East Asia -- 6.3.1. Flexible and consensual LVC practice in Japan -- 6.3.2. An LVC regime based on land concessions in Hong Kong -- 6.3.3. Optimization of the LVC by local governments in China -- 6.4. Conclusion -- 6.5. References -- Chapter 7. The Dual Regionalization of Real Estate Financialization in Southeast Asia -- 7.1. Introduction -- 7.2. The oligopolistic preconditions for the organization of real estate markets in Southeast Asia -- 7.3. A privatization of land tenure -- 7.4. Regionalization and internationalization of real estate development -- 7.5. Towards a rescaling of real estate production and urban governance -- 7.6. Financialization of the regional real estate market.
  • 7.7. China and the new geopolitics of real estate in Southeast Asia -- 7.8. Conclusion -- 7.9. References -- Chapter 8. Real Estate in the Middle East: An Economy Shaped by Rents -- 8.1. Introduction -- 8.2. The financialization of economies and real estate in the Middle East -- 8.2.1. Arab metropolises as engines of economic development -- 8.2.2. Half of foreign investments are in real estate in the Middle East -- 8.2.3. Capital invested in real estate and Arab real estate investment trust -- 8.2.4. Households' indebtedness for mortgages in the Middle East -- 8.2.5. The legalization of informal settlements through the titling of "dead capital" -- 8.3. Egypt and Jordan: the squandering of public land and the construction of new cities -- 8.3.1. The new cities of Cairo -- 8.3.2. The Abdali project, Amman -- 8.3.3. Rental renewals and their current outcomes in Cairo and Amman -- 8.4. Saudi Arabia: tax innovation to finance housing -- 8.5. Lebanon and Syria: reconstruction policies as a means of consolidating elites -- 8.5.1. Lebanon, land of investor exemptions and subsidies -- 8.5.2. Syria confiscates refugees' property and deploys a policy of territorial revenge -- 8.6. Conclusion -- 8.7. References -- Chapter 9. Building Cities in West Africa: Construction Boom and Capitalism -- 9.1. Construction boom and cement industry -- 9.2. City-making: actors and sectors -- 9.3. Concrete, towers and megaprojects -- 9.4. "Social" housing programs -- 9.5. Self-build and incremental urbanization -- 9.6. Conclusion -- 9.7. References -- Conclusion -- C.1. The emergence of the international dimension of real estate -- C.2. Real estate, a highly sought-after asset -- C.3. The diversity of capital accumulation dynamics in real estate -- C.4. From sectorial and induced real estate to the integrated and driving production of urban construction.
  • C.5. The financialized urban construct as a concrete scene of the global city -- C.6. Social consequences and the need for rethinking public policies -- C.7. References -- List of Authors -- Index -- EULA.
  • Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources.
Sprache
Identifikatoren
ISBN: 1-394-25749-X, 1-394-25747-3
Titel-ID: 9925172209306463
Format
1 online resource (272 pages)