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Conflict Generated: The Reconfiguration of Neighbouring in Changing Neighbourhoods in Istanbul and Vienna

Dilruba Erkan (University of Paris 1. Panthéon − Sorbonne France)
Michael Friesenecker (University of Vienna Austria)

Neighbours Around the World: An International Look at the People Next Door

ISBN: 978-1-80043-370-0, eISBN: 978-1-83909-476-7

Publication date: 18 August 2022

Abstract

Contemporary urban change is predominantly driven by migration and capital accumulation, with associated urban (re-)development projects – such as new-build gentrification – typically favouring the middle classes. Low-income residents in gentrifying neighbourhoods are often said to be displaced from their homes, either directly or indirectly, or to experience a loss of sense of place induced by the physical and social changes to the area. With the latter in mind, we investigate the perceived opportunities and threats of urban renewal experienced by stay-put communities in the wake of new developments and demonstrate how a loss of sense of place occurs via conflict between neighbours affected by the change. Our focus on transnational spaces comprising co-migrant Kurdish/Turkish communities in the two cities of Istanbul (Turkey) and Vienna (Austria) reveals not only how profoundly the impacts of neighbour conflict are felt as once-close and supportive neighbourly ties are severed but also how well-established neighbourly norms and obligations in transnational spaces accentuate the conflict in the first place. Moral codes that require neighbours to look after one another, along with local power dynamics of support in return for loyalty, set expectations that neighbours will take each other’s side when needed. Our findings reveal that the situatedness of residents to the development projects (in terms of proximity, residential tenure and openness to change) causes neighbours to take opposing sides and that the conflicts generated are accentuated by the perceived failure of neighbours to meet their neighbourly obligations. The result is a loss of sense of place and belonging for all residents – not just those detrimentally impacted by the development – wrought by rising hostility and avoidance among neighbours, and an overall weakening of neighbourly ties.

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Citation

Erkan, D. and Friesenecker, M. (2022), "Conflict Generated: The Reconfiguration of Neighbouring in Changing Neighbourhoods in Istanbul and Vienna", Cheshire, L. (Ed.) Neighbours Around the World: An International Look at the People Next Door, Emerald Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. 73-91. https://doi.org/10.1108/978-1-83909-476-720221005

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

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