Human Rights on the Altar of the Market: The Blackstone Letters and the Financialization of Housing
Transnational Legal Theory, 2020
28 Pages Posted: 27 Apr 2020
Date Written: April 1, 2020
Abstract
This article analyses the recent exchange of letters between two UN human rights mandate-holders and the Blackstone Group L.P., a private equity firm with significant investments in the rental housing market in multiple jurisdictions. The mandate-holders argue that Blackstone’s investments are causing serious harm to the right to housing, including retrogressing affordability, and increasing evictions, homelessness and housing-related poverty. The scale of investment displaces communities and reshapes the housing landscape for the next generation. Blackstone’s rebuttal was, in part, predicated on their subservience to market forces and their obeying the law in all jurisdictions. This is largely accurate, indicating that markets and their constitutive rules permit and incentivize retrogressive housing outcomes. The paper therefore argues that promoting socio-economic rights under financialized globalization requires challenging the engrained norms of marketization. International human rights law provides an entry point for this project.
Keywords: Right to housing, Blackstone, ICESCR, financialization, corporate landlords
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