Call for Papers: Change Over Time<http://cotjournal.com/call-for-papers/>

Gentrification and Heritage Conservation | Fall 2018

Guest Editors: Caroline Cheong and Kecia Fong

The term gentrification is used to describe both a process and outcome of 
physical, socioeconomic, and demographic neighborhood change. Its association 
with the displacement of low-income households by wealthier ones has 
overshadowed more nuanced understandings of the relationship between the 
historic built environment, conservation, and gentrification. This issue seeks 
to address this under-examined intersection. According to Rose (2001), 
neighborhoods with a high likelihood for gentrifying exhibit five key 
attributes: 1) a high percentage of renters; 2) easy access to the central 
business district; 3) location within a region of increasing metropolitan 
density; 4) high architectural value; and 5) relatively low housing values. In 
this schema, urban conservation is commonly considered to be a precursor to 
gentrification, particularly in distressed historic areas (Smith 1998; Glaser 
2010).

Gentrification drivers span from market trends to government-sponsored 
initiatives. In a market-led context, undervalued historic neighborhoods 
contain desirable attributes for incoming households, not least of which is the 
sense of place and continuity inherent within the historic built environment. 
In public scenarios, governments explicitly target historic neighborhoods for 
regeneration. In nearly all cases, existing, usually low or middle income 
households, face potential displacement. While gentrification has received 
ample scholarly attention, its occurrence in historic areas – and its 
interaction with heritage – is less thoroughly documented. This issue 
interrogates the relationship, past and present, between gentrification and 
heritage conservation. It does so by exploring questions related to heritage 
conservation in changing neighborhoods such as: Are historic neighborhoods 
necessarily targets for gentrification? What are the challenges and 
opportunities facing these areas, or those that are presently or have already 
undergone such processes? What other, more inclusive scenarios exist wherein 
urban conservation serves as a vehicle for neighborhood preservation? How can 
historians, conservation professionals, planners, and others allow for the 
concomitant retention of heritage and regeneration values? What variables are 
required in negotiating this balance? Who are the primary stakeholders and what 
roles do they play in the process of neighborhood change?

We welcome contributions from US and international contexts on a range of 
topics: researching and documenting place-based gentrification in historic 
contexts; exploring rural, urban, and suburban gentrification and conservation 
dynamics; equity issues related to changing historic areas; and solutions for 
managing neighborhood change in historic areas. Submissions may include, but 
are not limited to, case studies, theoretical explorations, and evaluations of 
current practices or policy programs.

Abstracts of 200-300 words are due 1 July 2017. Authors will be notified of 
provisional paper acceptance by 10 July 2017. Final manuscript submissions will 
be due early November 2017.

References:

Glaeser, Edward. (2010). Preservation Follies. City Journal, 20(2).

Rose, Kalima. (2001). Beyond Gentrification: Tools for Equitable Development. 
Shelterforce Online (May/June 2001).

Smith, Neil. (1986). Gentrification, the frontier, and the restructuring of 
urban space. In N. Smith & P. Williams (Eds.), Gentrification of the City (pp. 
15-39). Boston: Allen & Unwin.

Change Over Time is a semiannual journal publishing original articles on the 
history, theory, and praxis of conservation and the built environment. Each 
issue is dedicated to a particular theme as a method to promote critical 
discourse on contemporary conservation issues from multiple perspectives both 
within the field and across disciplines. Themes are examined at all scales, 
from the global and regional to the microscopic and material.

Regards,


Lucy Midelfort, Assistant Editor

Change Over Time: An International Journal of Conservation and the Built 
Environment
http://cotjournal.com<http://cotjournal.com/>
c...@design.upenn.edu<mailto:c...@design.upenn.edu>

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