Dividing a City: Real Estate Mega-Speculation and Contention in Miami, Florida.

Richard Tardanico, U. Oslender
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Abstract

Miami is not a newcomer to the history of gentrification that has reshaped the urban fabric in cities all over the world. Yet a new mega project to be implemented in Miami’s Little Haiti neighborhood represents a strategic capitalist modification of the city’s previous processes of class-based and racialized socio-territorial dispossession and displacement. As we argue in this paper, Little Haiti’s Magic City Innovation District stands emblematic for a global boom in financialized urban corporate accumulation, which presents new challenges to local communities. We ask, what practical political options does a predominantly poor minority community have in confronting such challenges? Our discussion of Miami’s Little Haiti suggests two conclusions: first, that real estate mega speculation potentially exacerbates politico-social divisions within such a community, subverts its capacity for resistance, and renders it more vulnerable to large-scale dispossession and displacement; and second, that mega speculation exacerbates socio-territorial divisions and inequalities within the fabric of a wider metropolis.
划分城市:佛罗里达州迈阿密的房地产投机和竞争。
在重塑世界各地城市结构的中产阶级化历史上,迈阿密并不是一个新来者。然而,在迈阿密小海地社区实施的一个新的大型项目代表了对城市先前基于阶级和种族的社会领土剥夺和流离失所过程的战略性资本主义修改。正如我们在本文中所论述的那样,小海地的魔城创新区代表着全球城市金融化企业积累热潮的象征,这给当地社区带来了新的挑战。我们问,在面对这些挑战时,一个以贫穷为主的少数民族社区有什么实际的政治选择?我们对迈阿密小海地的讨论得出了两个结论:第一,房地产的大规模投机可能会加剧这样一个社区内的政治社会分裂,颠覆其抵抗能力,并使其更容易受到大规模剥夺和流离失所的影响;其次,这种大规模投机加剧了更大范围的大都市内部的社会区域划分和不平等。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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