Lerninhalte in Englisch
Inhaltsverzeichnis

Vorschlag B2

Gentrification – a global phenomenon

Aufgaben

Der vorliegende Vorschlag enthält in Aufgabe 3 alternative Arbeitsanweisungen.
1

Describe the process of gentrification and the resulting changes in neighbourhoods according to the article. (Material)

(30 BE)
2

Analyse how the author conveys her attitude towards gentrification. Focus on communicative strategies and use of language. (Material)

(30 BE)
3
Choose one of the following tasks:
3.1

Taking the article as a starting point, write a letter to the editor of “The Guardian”, commenting on the effects of a globalised culture on urban neighbourhoods.

or

3.2

Global Citizenship Education (GCED) is part of the UN agenda and based on the idea that all people have civic responsibilities on a social, political, environmental, and economic scale to the world as a whole rather than just to their local communities or countries.

Discuss the need to make GCED a higher priority in schools.

(40 BE)

Material


Leslie Kern: It’s not all coffee shops and hipsters: what we get wrong about gentrification (2022)

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[...] On a trip to Mexico City, a bus tour whisks me through neighbourhoods teeming with cool cafes,
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elegant wine bars and stylish twentysomethings. Starbucks are surprisingly thick on the ground. When
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I ask my Spanish teacher about these areas, he rolls his eyes and rubs his thumb and fingers together: a
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universal sign for too expensive and full of unpleasant people.
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You don’t need to be a gentrification researcher (although I am one) to read these signs and
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immediately understand what is happening here. Gentrification feels, sounds and looks familiar
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wherever you are: young hipsters transforming neighbourhoods according to a remarkably
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homogeneous global code of taste and style.
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As accurate as that narrative might feel, the story we tell ourselves about the changing face of our
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inner-city neighbourhoods is far too basic. Vilifying the markers of gentrification alone fails to get to
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the root of the problem – and trust me, it’s not as simple as pour-over coffee – and lacks any useful
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ideas for countering the larger forces at play that have brought artisanal doughnuts to your community.
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It’s true that we can identify gentrification through certain styles and sites of consumption. This has
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been the case since the slow creep of a neighbourhood “on the up” was first noticed and named in
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north London in the 1960s. Since then, the tastes of gentrifiers – from what they wear, to what they eat
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– has generated endless commentary. Their preferences have been viewed as the harbingers of doom
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for working-class, minority communities in cities around the world.
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Sites that seem to embody these changes are easy targets. The now-closed Cereal Killer cafe in east
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London is one such example. Viewed as a sign of everything that had gone or could go wrong in this
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low-income, predominantly minority ethnic community, the purveyor of overpriced breakfast grains
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was targeted by protesters, vandals, and graffiti writers who warned of a gentrifier takeover. We love
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to hate these spaces and their seemingly oblivious owners. After all, they put a face to what seems like
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an insurmountable problem caused by distant forces.
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But the question we should be asking is whether closing a coffee shop is going to prevent
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gentrification. The answer is no, even if we acknowledge that places such as this do play a role.
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Today, however, the cultural capital of the avocado toast class is worth little compared with the might
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of the billion-dollar, multi-national, real estate investment and development industries – and their
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government partners – who now control our cities and neighbourhoods, as well as their potential for
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social and economic transformation.
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If we truly want to push back against gentrification, we are misplacing our energies by focusing
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primarily on superficial markers of taste. They are little more than symptoms of much more disruptive
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forms of urban change that are enriching the few at the expense of the many. The destruction or
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market-led “regeneration” of council housing is one such form; luxury high-rise development is
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another. Large-scale eviction processes, accelerated by the end of pandemic-era protections, are
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overtly enabling gentrification, especially in minority neighbourhoods. The rise of short-term letting
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through platforms such as Airbnb is helping to raise housing prices beyond the reach of even the
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middle classes.
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These processes are driven by the search for new ways to generate capital and wealth from urban
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space. The developers, speculators and investment firms that push these changes are able to do so
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because of government policy that not only allows, but often actively encourages, such developments.
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Whether it is through tax incentives, rezoning, or government-led “revitalisation” schemes, the state
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facilitates gentrification on multiple levels.
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When your corporate landlord is trying to evict you so that your building’s units can be renovated into
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luxury suites, a nearby coffee shop serving a £6 flat white certainly adds insult to injury. Don’t get me
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wrong, the cafe is part of the problem: it’s capitalising on and attracting the kind of changes that may
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be about to boot you from your community for good. However, the seeds that created the conditions
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for that cafe to take root were planted long before it even opened its doors, by actors with a
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tremendous amount of power. In other words, that expensive coffee is certainly not helping you but
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it’s not the entity “renovicting” you, either.
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Feel free to protest about the cafe, but your energy might be better placed organising the tenants in
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your building to fight against unfair evictions. This lesson applies more widely to the battle against
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gentrification. For all of us worried about the changes in our communities that are displacing longtime
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residents, council housing tenants, senior people, people who are immigrants, young people and many
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others, we must be strategic and focused in our struggle. This means not letting governments and
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corporations get away with bulldozing (literally and figuratively) our cities, while we’re distracted by
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annoyingly high-priced breakfast foods.
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Admittedly, redirecting our attention to Goliath – indeed, multiple Goliaths – is daunting. However,
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one of the reasons these groups succeed with their agenda to remake the city for profit, not people, is
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that we have come to accept the story that rampant capitalist interests cannot be defeated, or even
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slowed down. But resistance is possible. It can come through rent strikes, squatters’ movements and
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the growth of community-led models of development, such as community land trusts and cooperative
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housing. We can push governments to use the regulatory tools at their disposal: eviction bans, rent
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stabilisation, community benefit ordinances, zoning and taxation.
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You don’t have to like the latest vegan bistro-pub in your neighbourhood, but let’s remember to focus
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on the nefarious agents at play behind the trendy frontages. These powerful forces are dismantling
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people’s ability to live and thrive in our cities today. A different kind of future is possible, but only if
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we demand it and demand it from the right people.

(976 Wörter)
Leslie Kern: It’s not all coffee shops and hipsters: what we get wrong about gentrification,
in: The Guardian, 04.09.2022, source (abgerufen am 04.09.2022).

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