2011
DOI: 10.1155/2011/989676
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Producing a “Successful City”: Neoliberal Urbanism and Gentrification in the Tourist City—The Case of Palma (Majorca)

Abstract: Since the 1990s, the intensification of capital accumulation, especially in its financial dimension, has been one of the keystones for the triumph of neoliberalism. Spanish neoliberal policies have focused on the flexibilization of the real estate sector, leading to the specialization in the secondary circuit of accumulation. This has generated a third real estate boom which has been accompanied with an outstanding housing bubble. The Balearic Islands are a paradigmatic case within these logics, tourist specia… Show more

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Cited by 57 publications
(29 citation statements)
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References 33 publications
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“…Rather, the role of the State should be primarily to guarantee and ensure freedom of individual economic agents". Furthermore, in [24] (p. 2), neo-liberal urbanism is defined as "a form of urbanism subordinated to the dictates of capital, where urban powers attempt to position their cities in higher positions of the hierarchical global urban network in which competitiveness is the key".…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Rather, the role of the State should be primarily to guarantee and ensure freedom of individual economic agents". Furthermore, in [24] (p. 2), neo-liberal urbanism is defined as "a form of urbanism subordinated to the dictates of capital, where urban powers attempt to position their cities in higher positions of the hierarchical global urban network in which competitiveness is the key".…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For these authors, tourism gentrification is the urban materialization of global forces boosted by local neoliberal housing policies. In Southern Europe, the geographic expansion of the tourist industry over the historic centers and other urban areas that have been or are being restructured according to the needs and interests of visitors and investors has attracted the attention of several authors (Arias-Sans and Quaglieri-Domínguez 2016; Cocola-Gant 2016, 2018; Franquesa 2011; García-Herrera et al 2007;Kesar et al 2015;Lestegás et al 2018;Mendes 2017;Vives-Miró 2011).…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In 1970, such activities could often be amateurish and low budget; accepted as part of the armoury of measures used to aid urban and regional development, but often undertaken without clearly‐defined aims and liable to be assigned to non‐specialists in administrative departments felt to have time on their hands (Gold ). By 1990, the dramatic changes experienced by formerly prosperous industrial cities and the advent of neoliberal urbanism – broadly understood as a form of urbanism, subordinated to the dictates of market economics, ‘where urban powers attempt to position their cities in higher positions of the hierarchical global urban network in which competitiveness is the key” (Vives Miró , p. 2; cited in Jaffee , p. 120). The agendas derived from this approach would revalorise the need for active promotion and marketing as a high‐profile response to post‐industrial decline and to the fact that ‘cities around the world compete in a crowded global market’ (Short & Kim , p. 55).…”
Section: Antecedentsmentioning
confidence: 99%