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Strategies of self-organising communities in a gentrifying city

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-02, 20:06 authored by Eleonora van HolsteinEleonora van Holstein
While commonly pitched as potential spaces for the empowerment of marginalised minority groups, self-organised projects such as community gardens are also susceptible to neoliberal discourses and governance mechanisms. While relationships between community gardening and gentrification are now well established, less is known about the grassroots strategies of garden groups in the context of such conditions and the ways in which gentrification changes the community gardening movement itself. This paper combines conceptual approaches to community gardens as shaping citizen-subjectivities and as projects positioned in networks to offer detailed insight into strategic responses of community gardeners to a gentrifying environment. The paper highlights how demographic change, neighbourhood densification and changes in the attitude of local government shape three community gardens in Sydney, Australia. The paper reveals that, more than government policy, changes that gardeners observe in the neighbourhood and their perceptions of local government’s attitude towards different community gardens in the vicinity, shape how they manage community gardens. Interactions and responses of garden groups to perceived threats, as well as changes in the projects’ social composition, can lead to the emergence of conflict and competition. As it becomes increasingly clear that inequalities in the surrounding urban environment manifest as part of the social fabric of community spaces, the paper demonstrates that communities are differently positioned to articulate strategies in response to perceived precarity and that these strategies can amplify unequal opportunities for distinct garden groups to persist into the future.

History

Related Materials

  1. 1.
    DOI - Is published in 10.1177/0042098019832468
  2. 2.
    ISSN - Is published in 00420980

Journal

Urban Studies

Volume

57

Issue

6

Start page

1284

End page

1300

Total pages

17

Publisher

Sage Publications

Place published

United Kingdom

Language

English

Copyright

© Urban Studies Journal Limited 2019

Former Identifier

2006114836

Esploro creation date

2022-08-21

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