DEINDUSTRIALIZATION AND THE REAL-ESTATE–DEVELOPMENT–DRIVEN HOUSING REGIME. THE CASE OF ROMANIA IN GLOBAL CONTEXT Cover Image

DEINDUSTRIALIZATION AND THE REAL-ESTATE–DEVELOPMENT–DRIVEN HOUSING REGIME. THE CASE OF ROMANIA IN GLOBAL CONTEXT
DEINDUSTRIALIZATION AND THE REAL-ESTATE–DEVELOPMENT–DRIVEN HOUSING REGIME. THE CASE OF ROMANIA IN GLOBAL CONTEXT

Author(s): Enikő Vincze
Subject(s): National Economy, Political economy, Applied Sociology, Social development, Social Theory, Policy, planning, forecast and speculation, Economic development, Socio-Economic Research
Published by: Studia Universitatis Babes-Bolyai
Keywords: deindustrialization; housing; real estate development; Romania; semiperiphery; capitalism;

Summary/Abstract: The article examines how deindustrialization as economic restructuring and housing regime changes evolved interconnectedly in Romania during the Great Transformation from state socialism to neoliberal capitalism. This article also explores how they acted as conditions for the emergence of a real-estate-development-driven housing regime (REDD-HR) alongside other factors. The analysis is from the perspective of the geographical political economy on the variegated pathways of these phenomena across borders and secondary statistical data collected by two research projects conducted in Romania in the past two years. In the Eastern semiperiphery of global capitalism or a country of the Global Easts with a socialist legacy, after 1990, the state restructured the economy by privatizing industry and public housing. During state socialism, the housing regime supported industrialization-based urbanization, whereas deindustrialization-cum-privatization in emerging capitalism facilitated the appearance of real estate development. On the one hand, the article enriches studies on deindustrialization by highlighting the role of housing in the transformation of industrial relations; on the other hand, the paper revisits housing studies by analyzing deindustrialization as a process with an impact on the changing housing regime. Altogether, deindustrialization-cum-privatization and the changing housing sector are analyzed as prerequisites of the REDD-HR.

  • Issue Year: 68/2023
  • Issue No: 1
  • Page Range: 25-73
  • Page Count: 49
  • Language: English