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Bio
I am an assistant professor of Geography and Global Metropolitan Studies at the University of California, Berkeley. I received my Ph.D. in Environmental Psychology from the Graduate Center of the City University of New York. Prior to my appointment at UC Berkeley, I was a lecturer in the Department of Geography at the University of Sheffield in the United Kingdom and Visiting Assistant Professor in the Department of Urban Studies at Queens College of the City University of New York.
My research revolves around the role of housing in capitalist urbanization. I study how efforts to render immoveable property into liquid capital unevenly restructure urban space and social relations, and the urban struggles for justice that arise to contest this process of financialization. I aim to challenge the storied complexity of finance and its tendency to obfuscate public understanding through demystifying and concretizing the operations of financial capitalism in urban housing markets. I have opened up what financialization means for rental housing, showing how it has deepened, diversified, and expanded globally with the aid of a wave of advances in digital technology in the post-2008 era. At its core, my work is about how these processes of economic and technological change unevenly restructure urban space and the social relations of housing. My scholarship speaks to developments that are central to the future of cities: the growing importance of finance to capitalism, the turn to increasingly market-driven approaches to housing and urbanization, and the digital revolution.
My research revolves around the role of housing in capitalist urbanization. I study how efforts to render immoveable property into liquid capital unevenly restructure urban space and social relations, and the urban struggles for justice that arise to contest this process of financialization. I aim to challenge the storied complexity of finance and its tendency to obfuscate public understanding through demystifying and concretizing the operations of financial capitalism in urban housing markets. I have opened up what financialization means for rental housing, showing how it has deepened, diversified, and expanded globally with the aid of a wave of advances in digital technology in the post-2008 era. At its core, my work is about how these processes of economic and technological change unevenly restructure urban space and the social relations of housing. My scholarship speaks to developments that are central to the future of cities: the growing importance of finance to capitalism, the turn to increasingly market-driven approaches to housing and urbanization, and the digital revolution.
Research Interests
Papers共 34 篇Author StatisticsCo-AuthorSimilar Experts
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期刊级别
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合作机构
Tijdschrift voor Economische en Sociale Geografie (2024)
ANNALS OF THE AMERICAN ASSOCIATION OF GEOGRAPHERSno. 1 (2024): 139-163
Tijdschrift voor Economische en Sociale Geografie (2024)
ENVIRONMENT AND PLANNING A-ECONOMY AND SPACE (2024)
ANTIPODEno. 3 (2024): 743-754
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Author Statistics
#Papers: 34
#Citation: 1612
H-Index: 16
G-Index: 34
Sociability: 4
Diversity: 0
Activity: 1
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