“…While housing anxieties are particularly acute in Toronto, with a rental vacancy rate of 1.2% in 2018 (Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation [CMHC], 2017), the exponential expansion of short-term rental listings has prompted critical work across the world by a range of actors, including: academics (Barron, Kung, & Proserpio, 2018;Davidson & Infranca, 2016;Ferreri & Sanyal, 2018;Finck & Ranchordás, 2016;Gant, 2016;Germann Molz, 2018;Gurran & Phibbs, 2017;Gutierrez, García-Palomares, Romanillos, & Salas-Olmedo, 2017;Holman, Mossa, & Pani, 2018;Keren & Merante, 2017;Lambea Llop, 2017;Lee, 2016;Mermet, 2017;Schäfer & Braun, 2016;Wachsmuth et al, 2017;Wachsmuth & Weisler, 2018), activists (Cox and SLee, 2016;Slee, 2015;Wieditz, 2017), think tanks (Crommelin, Troy, Martin, & Parkinson, 2018;Jamasi & Hennessy, 2016) and city staff (City of Toronto, 2017;San Francisco Planning Department, 2015). Amidst a heated political climate coloured by a range of perspectives, a critical geographical approach has much to offer in interpreting the impacts of short-term rentals.…”