Abstract

The epistemologies and politics of comparative research are prominently debated within urban studies, with ‘comparative urbanism’ emerging as a contemporary lexicon of urban studies. The study of urban gentrification has, after some delay, come to engage with these debates, which can be seen to pose a major challenge to the very concept of gentrification. To date, similar debates or developments have not unfolded within the study of rural gentrification. This article seeks to address some of the challenges posed to gentrification studies through an examination of strategies of comparison and how they might be employed within a comparative study of rural gentrification. Drawing on Tilly (Big structures Large Processes Huge Comparisons. New York: Russell Sage), examples of four ‘strategies of comparison’ are identified within studies of urban and rural gentrification, before the paper explores how ‘geographies of the concept’ and ‘geographies of the phenomenon’ of rural gentrification in the United Kingdom, United States and France may be investigated using Latour’s (Pandora’s Hope. London: Harvard University Press) notion of ‘circulatory sociologies of translation’. The aim of our comparative discussion is to open up dialogues on the challenges of comparative studies that employ conceptions of gentrification and also to promote reflections of the metrocentricity of recent discussions of comparative research.

Highlights

  • There is a growing interest in comparative research, in urban studies where comparative urbanism is a vibrant subject of discussion (McFarlane and Robinson, 2012; Robinson and Roy, 2016; Ward, 2010), albeit one that has not hitherto featured in Dialogues in Human Geography

  • The following section considers how comparative strategies outlined with respect to urban gentrification relate to studies of rural gentrification. We explore how these strategies can be deployed in comparative studies of rural gentrification in France, United Kingdom and United States, drawing on Latour’s (1999) concept of ‘circulatory sociologies of translation’ to illuminate the geographies of gentrification and geographies of ‘articulating gentrification’

  • Drawing attention to Tilly’s (1984) identification of individualizing, universalizing, encompassing and variation-finding strategies of comparison, the article identified elements of each in studies of rural and urban gentrification, before exploring how they can be developed within a comparative study of rural gentrification in France, United Kingdom and United States

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Summary

Introduction

There is a growing interest in comparative research, in urban studies where comparative urbanism is a vibrant subject of discussion (McFarlane and Robinson, 2012; Robinson and Roy, 2016; Ward, 2010), albeit one that has not hitherto featured in Dialogues in Human Geography. We explore how a comparative study of rural gentrification in France, United Kingdom and United States could be developed to engage with the challenges identified by Bernt (2016).

Results
Conclusion

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