Beyond efficiency in low-income housing provision: Everyday negotiations of nonprofit staff and the limits to caring through marketized housing in Buffalo, New York

Gillian Prater-Lee
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Abstract

This paper analyzes how conflicting understandings of housing – housing as a commodity, a financial asset, a human right, and/or a form of service provision – coalesce in and are negotiated by nonprofit organizations that oversee low-income housing in Buffalo, New York. Critically analyzing nonprofit organizations as sites where discourses about housing come into conflict, I argue that the work of nonprofit staff materializes into the conditions of the contemporary system of housing provision and these organizations are important sites of everyday resistance to the marketization of low-income housing in the US. Through an institutional ethnography, I track how nonprofit workers fill the gaps in the private housing market in meeting the housing needs of low-income households. I also show how the marketization of low-income housing constrains nonprofit workers’ ability to enact a politics of housing as a right or a form of care. I look to the literature of feminist care ethics to argue that a broader, communal, and embodied understanding of housing provision could provide an alternative, non-marketized basis for a more just housing system – but one that must necessarily exceed the contemporary housing system.
超越低收入住房供应的效率:纽约布法罗市非营利性工作人员的日常谈判和通过市场化住房提供关怀的限制
本文分析了对住房的相互矛盾的理解——住房作为一种商品、一种金融资产、一项人权和/或一种服务提供形式——是如何在监督纽约州布法罗低收入住房的非营利组织中凝聚和协商的。批判性地分析非营利组织作为关于住房的话语发生冲突的场所,我认为非营利组织工作人员的工作具体化为当代住房供应系统的条件,这些组织是美国低收入住房市场化的日常抵抗的重要场所。通过机构人种学,我追踪了非营利工作者如何填补私人住房市场的空白,以满足低收入家庭的住房需求。我还展示了低收入住房的市场化如何限制了非营利性工作者制定住房政治作为一种权利或一种照顾形式的能力。我参考了女权主义关怀伦理的文献,认为对住房供应的更广泛、公共和具体化的理解可以为更公正的住房体系提供另一种非市场化的基础——但这种基础必须超越当代住房体系。
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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