The book mainly deals with changes in the social structure and the ways that different groups are linked to the city’s built environment. The main issues discussed in the book include the economic identity and the position of Athens in the regional and global urban networks; the reproduction of class and ethnic boundaries and the uneven distribution of different social groups in urban space; the exploration of political processes related to the class vote, including the gender and demographic profile of the city’s electorate; the making of the built environment, the main trends in real estate and the ways they affect the housing market. Athens is not abundantly discussed in the urban studies literature, even though social and spatial changes have been remarkable. As such, this book provides a concise overview of the main socioeconomic and spatial changes in Athens during the last two decades and their significance beyond the case of Athens.
This book will be of interest to researchers and students of the built environment, urban studies and urban sociology.
Thomas Maloutas is Researcher Emeritus at the National Centre for Social Research (EKKE) and Professor Emeritus at Harokopio University of Athens. He formerly served as General Secretary for Research & Technology; Director of the Institute of Urban and Rural Sociology and President of the Board of EKKE; and Professor at the Department of Planning, University of Thessaly). His research and published work are mainly related to housing systems and segregation/gentrification processes, with a focus on contextual parameters associated with changing welfare regimes and urban social stratification in the era of capitalist globalization.