Gabriel Leon-Ablan

Professor of Political Economy



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Professor of Political Economy


Curriculum vitae


Department of Political Economy

King's College London

Email: gabriel.leon_ablan@kcl.ac.uk
Twitter: gabrieljleon
Bluesky: gabrielleon.bsky.social



Gabriel Leon-Ablan

Professor of Political Economy


Department of Political Economy

King's College London

Email: gabriel.leon_ablan@kcl.ac.uk
Twitter: gabrieljleon
Bluesky: gabrielleon.bsky.social



Gentrification and Social Unrest: The Blitz, Urban Change and the 2011 London Riots


Journal article


Gabriel Leon-Ablan, Juta Kawalerowicz
Journal of Conflict Resolution, vol. 68, 2024, pp. 484-508


Article text
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APA   Click to copy
Leon-Ablan, G., & Kawalerowicz, J. (2024). Gentrification and Social Unrest: The Blitz, Urban Change and the 2011 London Riots. Journal of Conflict Resolution, 68, 484–508. https://doi.org/10.1177/00220027231163137


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Leon-Ablan, Gabriel, and Juta Kawalerowicz. “Gentrification and Social Unrest: The Blitz, Urban Change and the 2011 London Riots.” Journal of Conflict Resolution 68 (2024): 484–508.


MLA   Click to copy
Leon-Ablan, Gabriel, and Juta Kawalerowicz. “Gentrification and Social Unrest: The Blitz, Urban Change and the 2011 London Riots.” Journal of Conflict Resolution, vol. 68, 2024, pp. 484–508, doi:10.1177/00220027231163137.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{leon-ablan2024a,
  title = {Gentrification and Social Unrest: The Blitz, Urban Change and the 2011 London Riots},
  year = {2024},
  journal = {Journal of Conflict Resolution},
  pages = {484-508},
  volume = {68},
  doi = {10.1177/00220027231163137},
  author = {Leon-Ablan, Gabriel and Kawalerowicz, Juta}
}

Abstract

Many of the world’s major cities have recently seen large episodes of social unrest. What is the relationship between the changes these cities have experienced, particularly in the form of gentrification, and urban riots? We address this question by examining how local gentrification affected participation in the 2011 London riots. We use an instrumental variable strategy that exploits exogenous variation in the amount of local destruction caused by the Blitz; this is a strong predictor of local gentrification in London in 2001–2011. We find that gentrifying neighborhoods had a lower participation rate than other areas; this was a result of changes in the type of resident (a composition effect) and in the context in which the residents made their participation decisions (a contextual effect). Our findings are consistent with qualitative evidence from the United Kingdom and the United States, and highlight the effect that urban change can have on social order.


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