ABSTRACT

From the social cleansing of cities through to indigenous land struggles at the frontline of extraction megaprojects, planetary urbanisation is a contested process that is radically shaping social life and the sustainability of human civilisation. In this pioneering intervention, it is maintained that this turbulent planetary process is also a potent space for state–corporate criminality. Market manipulation, fraud, corruption, violence and human rights abuses have become critical spokes in the way space is being transformed to benefit speculative interests. This book not only offers investigative data that documents in detail the intricate ways state and corporate actors collude to profit from the built environment; it also establishes the tools for building a research agenda that can interrogate the crimes of urbanisation on a comparative, longitudinal basis.

The author sets out an investigative methodology which can be appropriated to conduct probing research into the hidden schemas and forms of collusion that buttress state–corporate criminality in the urban sphere. Coupled to this, a theoretical framework is developed for thinking about the networks, processes and mechanisms at the heart of property market manipulation, and the broader social relationships that sustain and reward illicit speculative activity. This book concludes that researchers and civil society have a critical role to play in challenging a historical form of planetary urbanisation, marked by endemic state–corporate criminality, that poses significant threats to the sustainability of lived communities and the rich biospheres that they depend upon.

This book will be of interest to criminologists, sociologists, human geographers, political scientists and those engaged with development studies, as well as civil society organisations and urban researchers.

chapter |7 pages

The darkness of neon lights

Introducing the crimes of urbanisation

chapter 2|26 pages

Fictitious capital, class monopoly rents and urban governance

Theorising criminogenic opportunity structures and incentive schemas

chapter 3|31 pages

The crimes of the powerful and urbanisation

An investigative framework

chapter 4|28 pages

Uncovering the data trail

Accessing, handling and triangulating sources

chapter 5|50 pages

The crimes of urbanisation and megaprojects

Investigating a ‘tourism city’

chapter 7|32 pages

State–corporate wrongdoing in land and property markets

Forging an analytical framework

chapter 8|9 pages

Crimes of urbanisation research and social resistance

Conclusions and the task ahead