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Resisting Eviction

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This book Meticulously documents how real estate investment firms and government colluded to gentrify a racialized neighborhood and how tenants fought back.
  • 09 November 2023
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Resisting Eviction centres tenant organizing in its investigation of gentrification, eviction and the financialization of rental housing. Andrew Crosby argues that racial discrimination, property relations and settler colonialism inform contemporary urban (re)development efforts and impacts affordable housing loss.

How can the City of Ottawa aspire to become “North America’s most liveable mid-sized city” while large-scale, demolition-driven evictions displace hundreds of people and destroy a community? Troubling discourses of urban liveability, revitalization and improvement, Crosby examines the deliberate destruction of home—domicide—and tenant resistance in the Heron Gate neighbourhood in Ottawa, on unceded Algonquin land.

Heron Gate is a large rental neighbourhood owned by one multi-billion-dollar real estate investment firm. Around 800 people—predominantly lower-income, racialized households—have been demovicted and displaced from the neighbourhood since 2016, leading to the emergence of the Herongate Tenant Coalition to fight the evictions and confront the landlord-developer. This case study is meticulously documented through political activist ethnography, making this book a brilliant example of ethical engagement and methodological integrity.

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Price: $28.00
Pages: 196
Publisher: Fernwood Publishing
Imprint: Fernwood Publishing
Publication Date: 09 November 2023
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9781773636375
Format: Paperback
BISACs: SOCIAL SCIENCE / Sociology / Urban, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Social Classes & Economic Disparity, POLITICAL SCIENCE / Public Policy / City Planning & Urban Development
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Andrew Crosby is a postdoctoral researcher in the School of Planning at the University of Waterloo, with a PhD in the Department of Sociology and Anthropology at Carleton University. He is co-author of Policing Indigenous Movements: Dissent and the Security State (2018, Fernwood).

: Revitalization and Settler Colonial “Improvement”
: The Racial Logics of Property Relations in Urban Settler Formations
: Domicide in the Liveable City
: Research Methods and Design
: The Heron Gate Community and the Onset of Racial Stigma and Strategic Neglect
: Heron Gate and the Financialization of Rental Housing
: Demoviction 2016: Domicide and Redevelopment in Heron Gate
: Demoviction 2018: Tenant Resistance to Domicide
: Community Wellbeing in the Liveable City: A Social Framework for Domicide
: Racial Discrimination in Housing and Human Rights