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Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
In view of the proliferation of alojamento local (short-term vacation rentals)
in the major Portuguese cities of Lisbon and Porto, along with the
recent transformation of the historic city centre neighbourhoods, this
study explores the mediatized politics of place by analysing data sets
resulting from different, but interconnected, discursive practices. At the
level of governance, we examine how legislation has enabled and facilitated
this transformation. We then explore the media coverage of the
issues surrounding these recent changes. Finally, we focus on individual
and collective stakeholder voices by analysing the various rights claims
and arguments found in social media communication channels. Framing
our analysis initially in Lefebvre’s concept of ‘the right to the city’, often
invoked as an argument for the promotion of justice, inclusion and sustainability
in the face of urbanisation policies, we argue that a ‘rights in
the city’ approach is better suited to gaining insight into the multiple
tensions and conflicts brought about through the interlinking processes
of regeneration, gentrification and touristification that affect neighbourhoods
with high proportions of short-term rental accommodation, and
conclude that there are many rights claimants within a seemingly unified
group of stakeholders, invoking rights claims which are sometimes
overlapping, but often conflicting.
Description
Keywords
Short-term rentals Right to the city Politics of place Media Discourse Rights in the city
Citation
Publisher
Routledge