Foreword
By Clive Barnett
Chapter 1. Introduction: Sharing Economies in Times of Crisis
By Sarah Marie Hall and Anthony Ince
Part 1: Sharing In and Through Crisis
Chapter 2. ‘It feels connected in so many ways’: circulating seeds and sharing garden produce
By Laura Pottinger
Chapter 3. Malleable homes and mutual possessions: caring and sharing in extended family households as a resource for survival
By Chris Gibson, Natascha Klocker, Erin Borger and Sophie-May Kerr
Chapter 4. Reciprocity in Uncertain Times: Negotiating Giving and Receiving Across Time and Place Among Older New Zealanders
By Juliana Mansvelt
Chapter 5. Relationships, reciprocity and care: alcohol, sharing and ‘urban crisis’
By Mark Jayne, Gill Valentine and Sarah L. Holloway
Part 2: Sharing, the Economy and Sharing Economies
Chapter 6. Home for Hire: How the sharing economy commoditises our private sphere
By Paula Bialski
Chapter 7. ‘Hand-me-down’ Childrenswear and the Middle-class Economy of Nearly New Sales
By Emma Waight
Chapter 8. Franchising the disenfranchised? The paradoxical spaces of food banks
By Nicola Livingstone
Chapter 9. Shared Moments of Sociality: Embedded Sharing within Peer-to-Peer Hospitality Platforms
By Katharina Hellwig, Russell Belk and Felicitas Morhart
Part 3: Alternative Sharingscapes
Chapter 10. Swimming against the tide: collaborative housing and practices of sharing
By Lucy Sargisson
Chapter 11. Just Enough to Survive: Economic citizenship in the context of Indigenous land claims
By Nicole Gombay
Chapter 12. Crisis
Anthony Ince is Lecturer in Human Geography at Cardiff University, UK. His primary research interests concern the everyday spatialities of political agency in relation to wider-scale social and economic processes. Previous and current research includes radical social movements, local labour market change and non-financial economies.
Sarah Marie Hall is Lecturer in Human Geography at the University of Manchester, UK. Her research sits in the broad field of geographical feminist political economy: understanding how socio-economic processes are shaped by gender relations, lived experience and social difference.
"This [book] is a welcome intervention, and the diversity of examples and angles provide much food for thought. This interdisciplinary collection will be of use and interest to many scholars, from economic geographers to social theorists. If you study the economy from any angle, it should be on your shelf." - Patricia Burke Wood, Anarchist Studies
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