TY - GEN AU - Parreño Castellano,Juan Manuel AU - Piñeira-Mantiñán,María José AU - González Pérez,Jesús AU - Parreño Castellano,Juan Manuel AU - Piñeira-Mantiñán,María José AU - González Pérez,Jesús TI - Fragmented City: International Mobility and Housing in Spain SN - books978-3-0365-2829-8 PY - 2022/// CY - Basel PB - MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute KW - Research & information: general KW - bicssc KW - Spanish cities KW - economic crisis KW - financialization KW - gentrification KW - housing crisis KW - post-Fordist capitalism KW - property bubble KW - property repossession KW - touristification KW - pandemic KW - real estate dispossession KW - mortgage foreclosure KW - evictions KW - short-term rentals KW - housing studies KW - critical geography KW - Canary Islands KW - megaprojects KW - neoliberalism KW - urban development KW - urban planning KW - Santa Cruz de Tenerife KW - Spain KW - tourist gentrification KW - real estate market KW - international migrations KW - tourist rejuvenation KW - urban inequality KW - master plans KW - urban projects KW - medium-sized cities KW - neoliberal urbanism KW - tourist housing KW - Airbnb KW - historic center KW - population KW - population growth KW - spatial reconfiguration KW - large urban areas KW - post-crisis period KW - urban project KW - urban agents KW - market urbanism KW - speculation KW - urban transformation KW - central area KW - Madrid KW - residential segregation KW - living conditions KW - spatial inequalities KW - urbanization process KW - environmental justice KW - urban parks KW - ecosystem services KW - Tarragona KW - n/a N1 - Open Access N2 - Habitual statements in academic and journalistic fields on the growing inequality of our cities call for multiple reflections. There are numerous indicators of inequality, and territorial specificities give rise to important and subtle differences. What is less debatable is the spatial expansion of inequality (from more outlying, poorer countries to the most developed ones) and its generalization on all scales (from rural to urban areas, and from large metropolises to small cities). Mobility and housing lie at the root of many of these processes, which are represented by phenomena that are often interconnected, such as gentrification and the elite social classes; impoverishment and immigrants in search of work; and segregation and refugees; among many others. In this book, we try to offer a Spanish-based vision of what we call urban geographies in transition-that is, urban geographies in which the key stages, for the purpose of analysis, are the real estate bubble (1996-2007), the subsequent crisis (2008-2013), and the ensuing recovery (2014-2020), without overlooking the impact of the current COVID-19 crisis on the configuration of a new spatial order in cities UR - https://mdpi.com/books/pdfview/book/4974 UR - https://directory.doabooks.org/handle/20.500.12854/79591 ER -