ABSTRACT

Challenging how social scientists, policymakers, legal scholars, and the public examine household debts and wellbeing, Viral Debt traces how debt moves within and across households to communities and institutions, with devastating effects.

Debt is not merely a contractual condition, it is also an inherently unequal relationship between creditor and debtor that can exploit pre-existing vulnerabilities while creating new ones. With a roster of leading social science and socio-legal scholars, this book shows how debt – like a contagion – works systematically across economic and social structures and geographies, demonstrating the ways in which policy has exacerbated the problem of debt through policy choices.

This volume offers urgent answers by drawing on quantitative data about household indebtedness, credit and debt policies, and local court actions, together with qualitative research.

The Open Access version of this book, available at www.taylorfrancis.com, has been made available under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives (CC BY-NC-ND) 4.0 International license.

chapter 1|18 pages

Viral debt

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Origins, pathways, and consequences
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part I|74 pages

What makes households vulnerable to viral debt

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chapter 4|26 pages

Unpacking neoliberalism, financialisation, and housing class inequality

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Debt virality, policy anomalies, and the case of mortgage prisoners
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part II|68 pages

Experience of viral spread

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chapter 5|16 pages

Fewer evictions, more owed

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New rental debt problems during the pandemic
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chapter 6|17 pages

The ABC of growing debt and inequality

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Austerity, Brexit and Covid-19
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part III|84 pages

Responding to the viral debt aftermath

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chapter 9|14 pages

Ripple effect of debt and health

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chapter 11|28 pages

Sunset clauses, false dawns

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Crises and possibilities for debt cancellation through law
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