Abstract
Abstract. Recently, urban housing policies in Europe have become more mobile, developing local responses to the housing question by building on examples from other cities. To understand the movement of policies, the policy mobility debate suggests sometimes irreconcilable concepts and we still need concepts that address the spatial dimension of how urban housing
policies travel between places. The article reflects on the extent to which selected concepts – policy knowledge, translation, and topologies – allow
an explicit treatment of movement and materiality in a geographical
understanding of housing policy mobilities. To cross-fertilize these concepts, the article revisits how key definitions relate to each other, and assesses the extent to which these concepts allow to understand the
mobilization and localization of urban housing policies in particular contexts. Overall, the article offers a nuanced conceptualization of
interurban movements and the spatial–material dimension of housing policies, and thereby enhances future empirical studies on urban housing policy.
Funder
Ministerium für Wissenschaft, Forschung und Kunst Baden-Württemberg
European Social Fund
Subject
Earth-Surface Processes,Anthropology,Geography, Planning and Development,Global and Planetary Change