Issue 4.1
Carcerality, Housing Precarity and Abolition
In Issue 2.1 (May 2020), our editorial collective published ‘Covid-19 and housing struggles: The (re)makings of austerity, disaster capitalism, and the no return to normal’. The paper ended with the following provocation: ‘It is imperative to make the impossibility of returning to normal a praxis: a terrain of inquiry and a terrain of struggle. This means that we need to think about what to do next with what we have at hand’ (RHJ Editorial Collective, 2020, p. 25). Two years later, we reflect on this question through this collective editorial with new clarity. We are writing at a point in which there are old and new wars further degrading the living conditions of many, bolstering the power of fascist regimes. Further, there is a widespread urgency to declare the pandemic over and as an episode of the past, thereby paving the way for a return to ‘normal’. What is this normal that too many seem to be longing for? It seems especially clear now that normal simply means the reproduction of a racial capitalist machine that continues to accumulate profit through violence and dispossession. The state has continued to consolidate power, enact violence, and inflict harm upon those who need protection. Rather than safeguard people’s homes and communities, the state extends its protection and power to landlords, private property, and capital. This is the context in which we, in collaboration with the Unequal Cities Network, have decided to focus our 4.1 Radical Housing Journal issue on the nexus of continuous crisis, carcerality, housing precarity, and abolition.
Cover photo: Ananya Roy
https://doi.org/10.54825/QDSN5781
Editorial
The Long Read
Informal Modes of Governance:
Negotiating Evictions and Housing Rights in Lisbon, Portugal
Saila-Maria Saaristo
‘Batti il 5!’
Grassroots Strategies Against the Administrative Invisibilization of Rome’s Housing Squatters Before and During the Pandemic
Margherita Grazioli
Community Land Trusts in Contexts of Informality
Process, Politics, and Challenges of Implementation
Patricia Basile and Tarcyla Fidalgo Ribeiro
Continuum of Carcerality
How Liberal Urbanism Governs Homelessness
After Echo Park Lake Research Collective
Retrospectives
Conversations
‘The rents keep on rising and so will we’
Reflections on the 2021 Rent Strike at Sussex University
Roseanne Steffen, Billie Krish, Daisy Handscombe, Haris Jamil, Michele Lancione, Samantha Thompson
Gentrification and State Violence
Terra Graziani, Andrew Szeto, and Erin McElroy
Picturing the Homeless, Building International Solidarities
Rob Robinson and Erin McElroy
Updates
Houselessness, Infrastructural Exclusion, and Stigmatization
Giuseppina Forte
Marronage and Philadelphia’s Housing Justice Fight
Sterling Johnson
Being Houseless in the Global South
An Update on Fortaleza, Brazil
Stéfany Grayce Teixeira Barbosa, Lara Aguiar Cunha, Guilhermo Ribeiro Mastroianni, and Canto
Book Review
Don Mitchell's 'Mean Streets'
Patrick Geiger
Blueprint For the Future
Unhoused Tenant Organizing in Los Angeles
After Echo Park Lake Research Collective