TY - JOUR
T1 - Rootlessness
T2 - How the Irish private rental sector prevents tenants feeling secure in their homes and tenant's resistance against this
AU - McArdle, Rachel
AU - Byrne, Michael
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 Elsevier Ltd
PY - 2022/11
Y1 - 2022/11
N2 - Ireland's housing situation in the 2020s is similar to many other Anglophone countries, including Australia and the UK: A deepening housing crisis, an increased reliance on the private rental sector, and a residual ideological preference for homeownership, despite this increasingly being a less viable option for ‘Generation Rent’. Using Fullilove's concept of rootshock, we argue that tenant perceptions of landlords’ actions and beliefs can contribute to a sense of rootlessness: no or few ties to the spatial setting of the dwelling. Using work done by resistance scholars, we also demonstrate that the inability to feel fully ontologically secure in one's residence often leads to attempts by the tenant to make roots in their dwellings or resist rootlessness to create the sense of being at home. Based on qualitative research undertaken in 2019 with renters in three Irish cities, Dublin, Cork and Galway, we examine everyday forms of resistance, to explore the possibilities tenants carve out for themselves in order to survive and exist in the private rental sector and conclude by asking how we can learn from these practices to think about how to improve living standards for tenants.
AB - Ireland's housing situation in the 2020s is similar to many other Anglophone countries, including Australia and the UK: A deepening housing crisis, an increased reliance on the private rental sector, and a residual ideological preference for homeownership, despite this increasingly being a less viable option for ‘Generation Rent’. Using Fullilove's concept of rootshock, we argue that tenant perceptions of landlords’ actions and beliefs can contribute to a sense of rootlessness: no or few ties to the spatial setting of the dwelling. Using work done by resistance scholars, we also demonstrate that the inability to feel fully ontologically secure in one's residence often leads to attempts by the tenant to make roots in their dwellings or resist rootlessness to create the sense of being at home. Based on qualitative research undertaken in 2019 with renters in three Irish cities, Dublin, Cork and Galway, we examine everyday forms of resistance, to explore the possibilities tenants carve out for themselves in order to survive and exist in the private rental sector and conclude by asking how we can learn from these practices to think about how to improve living standards for tenants.
KW - Housing
KW - Ireland
KW - Private rental sector
KW - Renting
KW - Tenants
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85140721056&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.geoforum.2022.09.013
DO - 10.1016/j.geoforum.2022.09.013
M3 - Article
SN - 0016-7185
VL - 136
SP - 211
EP - 218
JO - Geoforum
JF - Geoforum
ER -