The Streetcar Effect: Capital, Revitalization and the Battle over Gentrification in a Sunbelt City
Author
Launius, Sarah AnneIssue Date
2018Keywords
FinancializationGentrification
Settler Colonialism
Transit-oriented Development
Urban Redevelopment
Urban Revanchism
Advisor
Banister, Jeffrrey M.
Metadata
Show full item recordPublisher
The University of Arizona.Rights
Copyright © is held by the author. Digital access to this material is made possible by the University Libraries, University of Arizona. Further transmission, reproduction or presentation (such as public display or performance) of protected items is prohibited except with permission of the author.Embargo
Release after 22-May-2020Abstract
This dissertation investigates how, after three decades of failed attempts to revitalize Tucson’s downtown, reinvestment increased rapidly amid the Great Recession and the elements that seemed to have coalesced to build momentum. The findings presented herein center on the early stages of contemporary gentrification and redevelopment to expand our analysis of those state actions that create the possibilities for each. As such, this dissertation expands on our understanding of the economic cycles that lead to gentrification by looking specifically at actions fostered by the state that create the possibility for profit in Tucson’s downtown. The political priorities and possibilities envisioned by governments and quasi-governmental agencies shape the scale and content of redevelopment in Tucson’s downtown. Through these three central papers, findings demonstrate that active state intervention in the property market plays a critical role in both producing the conditions for redevelopment and spurring downtown investment. Specifically, public incentives function as gap financing (Appendix A), allowing local developers to gain construction loans in a credit-constrained city. In the case of investment attributed to the streetcar (Appendix B), much of the purported $1 billion in investment is from public coffers to the disadvantage of actual transit riders. Finally, these more contemporary actions are rooted within a long history of property dispossession in the United States, a process supported by the state against racialized peoples – a process that is maintained, in part, through patterns of uneven development that foster redevelopment and displacement (Appendix C). Taken together, these three papers extend the theorization of the so-called entrepreneurial state and the new techniques to channel public investments in a way that drives tax revenues into a pauper-state’s coffers. Yet, these moves are not simply about the state’s role in driving innovative redevelopment schemes. Rather, these papers discuss what’s at stake in urban revanchism as well as, and through, the on-going pathologization of nonwhite land and property.Type
textElectronic Dissertation
Degree Name
Ph.D.Degree Level
doctoralDegree Program
Graduate CollegeGeography