How London Was Captured by the Super-Rich
De som köpt den här boken har ofta också köpt Autocracy, Inc av Anne Applebaum (inbunden).
Köp båda 2 för 501 krA fascinating interdisciplinary study, which is a must read for anyone interested in the links between emotional security, private security, surveillance and the architecture of an increasingly militarised environment. -- Anna Minton * [on Domestic Fortress] * An urgent and important book that should be read by anyone keen to get to grips with the ways homes are morphing into fortresses across the world. -- Stephen Graham * [on Domestic Fortress] * Alpha City is the heart-breaking, carefully-told, story of how London - its heart, mind and soul - was stolen from the people by the plutocrats and their minions. When, the book asks, will the greed of the super-rich end up strangling the city, whose body sustains them? Rowland Atkinson has delved deep to uncover the extent of the super-rich's grip on London. A masterpiece. -- Danny Dorling, author of Inequality and 1% Turning large swathes of London over to the Super-Rich was meant to generate a sloshing pool of wealth that would 'trickle down' to the rest of us. In practice, the detailed, informed and devastating trawl through the global capital of the ruling class in Alpha City proves the only thing that has trickled down is contempt.' -- Owen Hatherley, author of The Ministry of Nostalgia Opens the lid on a can of dangerous worms. While Britain's policies to tempt the world's mobile hot money and its owners have blessed a small section of the population, Atkinson reveals how this has cursed far larger numbers of people, as the super rich have sucked away wealth, talent, investment, culture, government attention, and opportunities from the majority. A welcome and urgently important corrective to the dominant British narrative that the super-rich benefit London and the wider nation. -- Nicholas Shaxson, author of Treasure Islands A great book that provides vital insights into a strangely under researched group - the wealthiest people on the planet. -- Anna Minton, author of Big Capital In Alpha Cities, Rowland Atkinson lays bare how London has been geared up as the world's monument to inequality. It exposes the tactics of gilded elites alongside their legions of enablers and hangers on, and the ways in which they have turned an already tough city into a 21st century dystopia, where the ultra-rich glide through pristine, soulless environments while the infrastructure we all need decays around us. This fast-paced guide to the new gilded age is a timely warning of how much damage inequality can do. * Douglas Murphy, author of Nincompoopolis * Timely and relevant...Alpha City takes us through the ugly world of a mega city captured by wealth. Cities and towns have always struggled with inequality and the social and spatial realities of unequal access to power and resources. In the great global cities, such as London and New York, these inequalities have often been more stark. -- Eoin Broin * Irish Times * An urgent reminder of the capital's inequalities. -- Ceri Radford * Independent * The inequalities are glaring. It is a revealing but unsettling read, whatever page you land on. -- Angela Cobbinah * Camden New Journal * Essential reading before Covid-19, is even more so now . . .vividly describes how the super-rich have distorted the socioeconomic and physical landscape of London * Morning Star * [Atkinson] writes with flair. The long-term result of the pressures he charts is starting to be felt. -- Mika Ross-Southall * Times Literary Supplement *
Rowland Atkinson is Research Chair in Inclusive Societies at the University of Sheffield. His research has focused on the spatial impacts of social inequalities, taking in work on gentrification and displacement, gated communities, public housing, social exclusion, fortress homes and, of course, the super-rich. Seeing the role of social science as bringing attention to social problems he has highlighted the need for social housing and more attention to be paid to the invisible casualties of complex urban processes. He is the author of Domestic Fortress (with Sarah Blandy) and Urban Criminology (with Gareth Millington).