Issue 2.2
Radical housing (dis)encounters: Reframing housing research and praxis
We came to this issue before the outbreak of Covid-19, and we release it amidst what feels like an entirely new, and yet also entirely known world-order—a place of multiple and multiplying crises that existed before the pandemic and continue, relentlessly, to render certain people, bodies and homes disposable. It is against this cruelty, but also with a renewed sense of radical hope in justice everywhere, that RHJ first came to be. The majority of contributions to Issue 2.2 emerge from a long process of designing and selecting participants for the event Radical Housing Encounters: translocal conversations on knowledge and praxis. This event was meant to take place in person, in three separate locations simultaneously, at the end of May 2020. Through it, we sought to define and re-define radical housing knowledge and practice, paying particular attention to diverse methodological, theoretical and ethical approaches deployed in both research and militant practice around the globe. While disappointed that the event could not take place as originally planned, its rationale and ethics of care are central to the making of this issue and are reflected in the texts of its contributors as well as the process of organising the issue.
Cover photo: Alize Arican
https://doi.org/10.54825/LKHN8954
Editorial
The Long Read
Political infrastructures of care:
Collective home making in refugee solidarity squats
Matina Kapsali
Radical housing and socially-engaged art:
Reflections from a tenement town in Delhi’s extensive urbanisation
Nitin Bathla and Sumedha Garg
The Black city:
Modernisation and fugitivities in Salvador, Bahia, Brazil
Glória Cecília dos Santos Figueiredo, Brais Estévez and Thaís Troncon Rosa
Nothing about us without us:
Centering lived experience and revolutionary care in efforts to end and prevent homelessness in Canada
Alex Nelson
Migrant accommodation as a housing question, and how (not) to solve it
Christian Sowa
Retrospectives
Conversations
Habitat International Coalition
Networked practices, knowledges and pedagogies for translocal housing activism
Adriana Allen, Camila Cociña and Julia Wesely
Activist*scholar collaborations in times of crisis, and beyond
reflections on ‘Urban Activism: Staking Claims in the 21st Century City’
Stefano Portelli and Aylin Yildirim Tschoepe
Mapping radical communities for a new dialogue
Sadia Sharmin, Louisa Scherer
Updates
Translocal action research to Stop the Sweeps
Erin Goodling
Care in Tarlabaşı amidst heightened inequalities, urban transformation and Coronavirus
Alize Arican
Estate Watch London, and Beyond
London Tenants Federation, Just Space and Loretta Lees
Anatomy of a right to shelter struggle in an authoritarian regime:
Dikmen Valley
Oznur Yardimci
Book review of ‘Squatters in the Capitalist City:
Housing, Justice and Urban Politics'
Irene Molina