Scientists find out: Gentrification  is bad for you!
Roger Keil #
Gentrification is bad for you.  How bad? Just ask a group of German researchers who find themselves  accused of belonging to a “terrorist organization”, largely because  they published on the subject. Their work on gentrification (among other  things) can allegedly be linked through textual analysis to the communiques  of a so-called ‘militant group’ suspected of political extremism.  In turn, three persons, who are charged with trying to set fire to three  army vehicles outside of Berlin on July 31, 2007, are suspected by the  police to be members of that group. In this cycle of suspicions, the  ends don’t quite meet.
 researchers who find themselves  accused of belonging to a “terrorist organization”, largely because  they published on the subject. Their work on gentrification (among other  things) can allegedly be linked through textual analysis to the communiques  of a so-called ‘militant group’ suspected of political extremism.  In turn, three persons, who are charged with trying to set fire to three  army vehicles outside of Berlin on July 31, 2007, are suspected by the  police to be members of that group. In this cycle of suspicions, the  ends don’t quite meet.
However, in the eyes of the  German police writing texts is not the only crime committed. The researchers  are also accused of having “contacts”, mostly resulting from their  long participation in neighborhood groups and anti-war movements, to  people seen as a being a part of Berlin’s radical left wing scene.  Ideas and contacts are mixed by the prosecution into a cocktail of “terrorist  activities”.
Gentrification plays a critical  part in this story. People in Toronto, Vancouver, Montreal and other  Canadian cities have learned in recent years that a seemingly unstoppable  process is changing their cities. Gentrification is the name of the  game. It replaces the local corner store with a Starbucks and a low  rent apartment with a luxury condo. It evaporates the jobs that allow  people to make ends meet. Scholars have studied this process, which  takes its name from the root of the word, gentry, used for the  English landed aristocracy, since the 1960s. Since the mid-1980s, it  has spread as a world wide phenomenon and has changed the face of our  cities. While many urban development agencies and municipal governments  actively promote gentrification as a strategy of urban renewal, critical  researchers everywhere decry the catastrophic consequences for local  communities, poor people and the social diversity of cities.
This kind of research has now  gotten some academics into trouble. In a bizarre series of developments,  the German Federal Prosecutor has accused a sociologist, a political  scientist, as well as a student and a social movement activist of “terrorism”.  One prominent scholar, Dr. Andrej Holm, is in solitary confinement in  a Berlin jail; another one, Dr. Matthias B. has had his apartment raided,  his computer confiscated and is under investigation for belonging to  a terrorist association. All accused have been charged under a recently  more frequently used section of German criminal law, 129a, which was  passed in 1976 at the height of the tense period of West German history,  when the government pulled out all the stops to defeat the terrorist  threat of the Baader-Meinhof group, also known as the Red Army Faction.  It is directed in particular at exposing and destroying links between  the ‘doers’ and the ‘thinkers’ in movements. From its inception,  it has been criticized for allowing the state to criminalize both activists  and researchers by claiming that together they form a terrorist association.  It seems that 31 years after it saw the light of day, the law has finally  created its perfect storm.
We have gotten used to a fair  degree of government panic and overreaction since the unfortunate events  of 9/11 but the German developments signal yet another step into the  wrong direction. Although there is no established link at all between  the critical scholarly writings of the accused – some as long ago  as 1998 – and the attempted burning of the army vehicles, the connection  is nonetheless made. Nor has it been established that the three arrested  for alleged arson are members of the elusive “militant group,” an  association the accused have denied. 
The wider consequences of this  development are alarming beyond Berlin. The question on the mind of  many critical social scientists everywhere is now: which aspects of  their work may lead to their criminalization down the road?  If  they can do this in Germany, should we be surprised that people are  arrested and tortured for their views as it has happened to Dr. Kian  Tajbakhsh and fellow academics recently in Iran, who are accused of  pro-American propaganda. Tajbaksh and his colleagues have been arrested  three months ago and have been detained since.  Those arrested  in Tehran are in jail for doing work interpreted as threatening by the  government there. Have we arrived at the point where thinking critically  has become a dangerous activity in the West, too?
Both cases have exposed the  vulnerability of critical social science research. But they have also  led to an unprecedented wave of protest and reaction among the academic  and intellectual communities world-wide. It seems a line has been crossed.  At a time when we hail creativity as an urban panacea  from New  York to Toronto, from Berlin to Shanghai, those who research the downside  of gentrification, and expose social exclusion and marginalization will  not go silently into the urban night. Critical social science is indispensable  for a healthy democratic society. Standing up for free speech and academic  freedom must concern us all. When those who are persecuted for their  critical academic work are in danger, it is up to all of us to step  up to the plate to defend their and our freedoms.
Ute Lehrer
Associate Professor, Faculty  of Environmental Studies, York University
Toronto, August 12, 2007
For further information and join other international academics who have signed an Open Letter of protest submitted to the German Federal Prosecutor’s Office, see:
http://einstellung.so36.net/en 
 
 
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