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Home-sharing as transnational moorings

Author

Listed:
  • Albert Arias-Sans
  • Alan Quaglieri-Domínguez
  • Antonio Paolo Russo

Abstract

Barcelona, one of the main destinations for Airbnb users, has turned into one of the main stages for the now global debate around short-term rentals and their impacts on resident communities. Criticism has mostly focused on the conversion of housing into conventional tourist apartments while less attention has been paid to the problematization of short-term rentals in primary residences. Important questions thus arise as to whether these allegedly genuine forms of home-sharing should be ‘formalised’ at all through a regulation, and which type of controls should be applied. Our research helps to excavate this issue, shedding further light on the different logics and practices behind the development of home-sharing, and discusses the limitations of a regulation which is being introduced. To this end, it offers an in-depth analysis of the home-sharing supply in Barcelona, tackling its social and spatial logics, which is framed in the broader debate on processes of social change affecting inner cities. It then focuses on el Raval, one of Barcelona's core neighbourhoods where home-sharing practices have become more diffused, revealing how these practices are strongly correlated with high residential mobility and the presence of a single-dweller childless European resident population. Finally, we argue that home-sharing becomes an equally problematic agency of conversion of housing into a mooring for mobile communities, further contributing to potential gentrification and the displacement of residents.

Suggested Citation

  • Albert Arias-Sans & Alan Quaglieri-Domínguez & Antonio Paolo Russo, 2022. "Home-sharing as transnational moorings," City, Taylor & Francis Journals, vol. 26(1), pages 160-178, January.
  • Handle: RePEc:taf:cityxx:v:26:y:2022:i:1:p:160-178
    DOI: 10.1080/13604813.2021.2018859
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