The Rentier City: Making Modern Manchester
By (Author) Isaac Rose
Watkins Media Limited
Repeater Books
14th May 2024
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Urban and municipal planning and policy
Paperback
250
Width 130mm, Height 197mm
369g
How did Manchester became the poster-child of neoliberal urbanisation, and what can the people that live there do about it As the crane capital of Europe, Manchester's transformation since the financial crisis has been profound. Capital has flooded into the city, transforming its skyline and rocketing rents. At the same time, it remains a city of stark inequalities - home to some of the poorest wards in the country. Yet this didn't come out of nowhere. Rather, its roots lie in the long story of the city's political journey since the 1980s, and the defeat of municipal socialism and the embrace of urban entrepreneurialism which saw Manchester become the model neoliberal city. In The Rentier City, tenant organiser Isaac Rose traces the contemporary history of Manchester, examining how and why it became the poster-child for neoliberal development. Exploring the cultural commodification that Manchester pioneered in its pursuit of the "creative class" and the rise of the rentier, Rose lays bare the results of this experiment. Tracking the triumphs and failures of those who have sought to fight back, he shows us what life is like for those who make a home in the shadow of the towers. Bursting the bubble of the boosters and giving renters a toolkit for reclaiming their homes, communities and cities from Big Capital, The Rentier City punctures the hypocrisies that surround the "Manchester miracle", showing how everyone can fight back against rising rents, gentrification and the financialisaton of the places they live.
Isaac Rose is a writer and tenant organiser who lives in Manchester. He has been a tenant organiser with Greater Manchester Tenants Union for three years, and has been involved with Greater Manchester Housing Action for over five years. He was the chair of Manchester Momentum 2018-20, and his writing on housing has been published in Tribune.