4.4 Article

Low-Carbon Gentrification: When Climate Change Encounters Residential Displacement

Journal

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/1468-2427.12634

Keywords

ecological gentrification; low-carbon transition; housing; urban regeneration; energy efficiency; Poland

Funding

  1. COST (European Cooperation in Science and Technology)
  2. European Research Council under the European Union's Seventh Framework Programme (FP7/2007-2013)/ERC grant [313478]

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This article focuses on the emergence of low-carbon' gentrification as a distinct urban phenomenon, a process that we see as the outcome of efforts to change the social and spatial composition of urban districts under the pretext of responding to climate change and energy efficiency imperatives. The article develops a conceptual framework for scrutinizing low-carbon gentrification, predicated upon insights from literatures on ecological gentrification and displacement. It documents the existence of an eco-social paradox' associated with new patterns of socio-spatial segregation and energy efficiency retrofits. We interrogate the discursive and policy frameworks, socio-spatial implications and political contestations of low-carbon gentrification. Evidence is drawn from case study research in an inner-city district of the Polish city of Gdask, where such processes have been unfolding since 2006 due to the implementation of a targeted urban regeneration programme. This investigation is positioned within a wider analysis of secondary written sources about similar developments in other geographical contexts across Europe and North America, where anecdotal evidence suggests that low-carbon gentrification may be widespread and common.

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