Abstract

Urban scholars have traditionally associated displacement in cities of the global North with gentrification, generally understood as a class-based process of neighbourhood change. This article expands this scalar focus and adopts the larger scale of the local authority district (in this case the London borough) as its epistemological starting point to study the displacement of homeless people by the local state. Participatory action research was undertaken with housing campaigners in the East London borough of Newham to explore who is being displaced, their experiences of displacement and the impacts of displacement on their lives. Empirically, the article argues that displacement in this case is a product of national welfare state restructuring – or ‘austerity urbanism’ – implemented through a localised regime of ‘welfare chauvinism’ in which some groups are framed as economically unproductive and therefore undeserving of access to social housing. Displacement has the effect of reinforcing the surplus status of these groups by separating them from employment, education and care networks and eroding their physical and mental health. The article draws on research on the biopolitics of surplus populations in the global South to develop an original theorisation of the relationship between welfare state restructuring and displacement. This theorisation reveals that displacement is the spatial expression of a biopolitical shift away from the logic of ‘making live’ associated with the post-war welfare state towards a logic of ‘letting die’ more traditionally associated with postcolonial contexts.

Highlights

  • In September 2013, eviction notices landed on the doorstep of Jasmin Stone, Samantha Middleton and 27 other homeless young mothers living in the Focus E15 hostel in the East London borough of Newham

  • This theorisation reveals that displacement is the spatial expression of a biopolitical shift away from the post-war role of the welfare state in reproducing those populations who are surplus to the requirements of capital

  • Doing so has enabled us to argue that displacement in Newham is the spatial expression of a biopolitical shift in the role of the welfare state away from ‘making live’ towards ‘letting die’

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Summary

Introduction

In September 2013, eviction notices landed on the doorstep of Jasmin Stone, Samantha Middleton and 27 other homeless young mothers living in the Focus E15 hostel in the East London borough of Newham (one of 32 local authority, or ‘council’, districts that comprise Greater London). It shifts the explanatory focus away from processes of gentrification at the neighbourhood scale and explores the role of welfare state restructuring at both local and national scales in producing urban displacement (van Lanen, 2020) In the process, it seeks to problematise the fetishisation of particular scales in urban research and contribute to a more relational, multiscalar approach to urban theory production (Brenner, 2019). State rescaling under austerity urbanism has produced localised regimes of welfare chauvinism that result in the displacement of the ‘undeserving’ poor This demonstrates the importance of a multiscalar approach that looks beyond processes of neighbourhood change in order to analyse the role of welfare state restructuring occurring between national and local state scales in the production of displacement

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