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List of Tables

  2.1: Classical forms of rent and gentrification

  2.2: Decommodification and displacement

  3.1: Trends in household tenures, London 1961–2016

  3.2: Subsidies for housing and housing construction by types of subsidies in billions of DM, 1965–1988

  3.3: Regulations on rent increases in sitting tenancies in Germany, 1971–2019

  3.4: Regulations on rent increases in Berlin and Germany as of 2019

  3.5: Estimated housing costs for a two‐bedroom flat in the centre of St Petersburg (2017)

  3.6: Commodification gaps in the UK, Germany and Russia

  4.1: Percentage of households by tenure in Barnsbury

  4.2: Social class in Barnsbury based on Butler and Lees (2006) and UK Census 1992–2011

  5.1: Renovated flats in Urban Renewal Areas in Prenzlauer Berg 1994–2001

  5.2: Percentage of sitting and new tenancies after renovation in Urban Renewal Areas in Prenzlauer Berg 1995–2002

  5.3: Number and percentage of individually owned apartments in Urban Renewal Areas in Prenzlauer Berg

  5.4: New built housing units in the Urban Renewal Areas of Prenzlauer Berg

  5.5: Subsidised housing units and commitment periods in the Urban Renewal Areas in Prenzlauer Berg

  5.6: Characteristics of different segments of the housing sector in the Helmholtzplatz neighbourhood

  6.1: Planned renovations in St Petersburg

  A.1: Housing units acquired through the use of compulsory purchase orders by the borough of Islington between 1973 and 1976 and sold after 1995 in the Barnsbury Ward

  B.1: Share of NS‐SeC Class 1 and 2 and tenure as a percent of all residents aged 16– 74 in UK Census Output Areas of Barnsbury in 2011

The Commodification Gap

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