Geographical_Journal_ACCEPTED VERSION.pdf (487.25 kB)
New frontiers of studentification: the commodification of student housing as a driver of urban change
journal contribution
posted on 2018-06-18, 13:38 authored by Chloe Kinton, Darren SmithDarren Smith, John HarrisonJohn Harrison, Andreas CuloraStudentification has permeated policy-orientated agendas on community cohesion in different national contexts, and is of increasing public relevance at a time of changing systems of higher education. To date, studentification has been treated as a process of urban change that leads to the physical downgrading of neighbourhoods and social conflict, tied to concentrations of low-quality student houses in multiple occupation (HMOs). Our aim in this paper is to widen conceptual understandings of studentification, drawing upon a novel study of this process in Loughborough, UK. Focussing on the Kingfisher estate, we provide the first investigation of the formation of a studentified neighbourhood, using data from administrative datasets to track tenurial transformations from owner-occupation to private rental shared housing. Our analyses are deepened from a survey of student preferences for accommodation, and interviews with local community representatives, to reveal a production-consumption interface for high-quality student housing in Kingfisher. We argue that this is illustrative of a new frontier of studentification, which emphasises the volatility of student housing markets. Crucially, these dynamics are having a significant influence on broader changing urban geographies, such as the de-studentification of other neighbourhoods, and the overall supply of (affordable) housing. Our paper concludes by arguing for a wider conceptualisation of studentification that does not inherently view the process as a harbinger of downgraded urban environments. From a policy perspective, our research stresses the urgent need for different place-specific solutions and policy interventions to mitigate the challenges of studentification.
History
School
- Social Sciences
Department
- Geography and Environment
Published in
The Geographical JournalCitation
KINTON, C. ... et al, 2018. New frontiers of studentification: the commodification of student housing as a driver of urban change. The Geographical Journal, 184(3), pp. 242-254.Publisher
© Royal Geographical Society (with the Institute of British Geographers). Published by WileyVersion
- AM (Accepted Manuscript)
Publisher statement
This is the peer reviewed version of the following article: KINTON, C. ... et al, 2018. New frontiers of studentification: the commodification of student housing as a driver of urban change. The Geographical Journal, 184(3), pp. 242-254, which has been published in final form at https://doi.org/10.1111/geoj.12263. This article may be used for non-commercial purposes in accordance with Wiley Terms and Conditions for Use of Self-Archived Versions.Acceptance date
2018-05-22Publication date
2018-07-15ISSN
0016-7398eISSN
1475-4959Publisher version
Language
- en