“…The GFC and the associated Great Recession should therefore be understood as "a justifying mantra" (Levitas 2013) which forms part of a resurgent neo-liberalism with aims and practices which include disempowering and dismantling systems of social protection (Krugman 2012;Taylor-Gooby, 2012), re-structuring, rescaling and downsizing the state (Donald et al, 2014;Lowndes and Gardner, 2016), and shifting the locus of risk and responsibility on to the public and to the poor in particular (Peck, 2012;Kennett et al, 2015). This paper focuses on the urbanisation of these austerity measures and on the effects of this urbanisation on the poor and marginalised -that is, on the 'austerity urbanism' thesis developed by Jamie Peck to explain the dimensions and significance of austerity in US cities (2012; 2014), and applied and augmented by others in relation to the US and to other developed nations (for example, Davidson and Ward, 2014;Tabb, 2014;Meegan et al, 2014;Pugalis et al, 2014;Davies and Blanco, 2017).…”