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Chapter 5 Residents, interviewees, class representatives? Reflections on the use of qualitative interviews in knowing the worlds of gentrification

Qualitative Housing Analysis: An International Perspective

ISBN: 978-1-84663-990-6, eISBN: 978-1-84663-991-3

Publication date: 13 October 2008

Abstract

For policymakers and academics alike, gentrification – the renovation of socially and economically marginal inner-city areas by higher status social groups – has become an issue of rising importance in the changing social structures of developed-world cities (Smith, 1979; Rose, 1984; Hamnett, 1991). In the regeneration of deprived inner-urban areas, it is seen as a double-edged sword, its potential to reinvigorate local property markets and provide much-needed investments of social capital matched by its tendency towards displacement of ‘less desirable’ extant populations and social division between middle-class newcomers and incumbent working-class residents (Smith, 1992; Blokland, 2002; Butler, 2003).

Citation

Martin, G.P. (2008), "Chapter 5 Residents, interviewees, class representatives? Reflections on the use of qualitative interviews in knowing the worlds of gentrification", Maginn, P.J., Thompson, S. and Tonts, M. (Ed.) Qualitative Housing Analysis: An International Perspective (Studies in Qualitative Methodology, Vol. 10), Emerald Group Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. 115-139. https://doi.org/10.1016/S1042-3192(08)10005-2

Publisher

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Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2008, Emerald Group Publishing Limited