Benjamin Irvine
banner
econbecon.bsky.social
Benjamin Irvine
@econbecon.bsky.social
Researcher of the economy, ecology, work and housing 📈
Connoisseur of concrete 🛹
https://benjaminirvineresearch.wordpress.com/
Reposted by Benjamin Irvine
Hot, dry weather, exacerbated by climate change, shrinks the soil under buildings. In London this means a million properties will be at risk of subsidence by 2030 according to Aviva Plc.

The climate squeeze is getting tighter
January 12, 2026 at 2:13 PM
Just read Edward Said's essay "traveling theory". It is mind-expanding. A worldly cruise through Lukacs, Williams, Foucault and more exploring what happens when a theory, produced in a particular time and place, travels. Guaranteed to jolt your neurons to a higher state of critical consciousness.
December 4, 2025 at 11:27 AM
Even when Ehrlich's "the population bomb" was published in the 1960's, the ticking time bomb was the opposite of what he diagnosed: a degrowing population, aging societies and how to sustain intergenerational reproduction. Wrapping our heads around this late capitalist clusterfuck seems essential.
‘Just one of either depopulation in the North or climate change in the South could be enough to drive mass migration.

Anyone who thinks the 21st century will not see the biggest global movement of peoples in history has not been paying attention.’

David Runciman:

www.lrb.co.uk/the-paper/v4...
David Runciman · Are we doomed? The End of the Species
Are we doomed to die out? We find ourselves at the only point in the history of the species when the rate of population...
www.lrb.co.uk
November 18, 2025 at 2:40 PM
Reposted by Benjamin Irvine
Microdosing retirement by living a no push notification life.
October 29, 2025 at 10:39 PM
Reposted by Benjamin Irvine
Urban planning, Urban geography, Urban political science
October 8, 2025 at 4:10 PM
Reposted by Benjamin Irvine
Here is our panel with colleagues from @bcnuej.bsky.social, consider sending your presentation proposal by DEC 5th via the link below, for the @pollenetwork.bsky.social conference to be held in Barcelona end of June 2026!

nomadit.co.uk/conference/p...
P017: Living with the Weather: Everyday Adaptations, Urban Inequalities, and Justice-Centered Climate Responses
The format intended is a panel of short presentations and a common discussion. We will invite up to 5 panel participants.
nomadit.co.uk
October 9, 2025 at 10:45 AM
I'm writing the last chapter for my PHD thesis, a "discussion" chapter which summarises findings from the empirical chapters, how the thesis answers the research questions and it's contribution to debates in critical urban geography. Would love to see examples of recent theses that did this well!
October 8, 2025 at 8:31 PM
Also looking forward to getting this one!
September 22, 2025 at 2:48 PM
Speaking of abundance, this new book looks excellent
The strawberry is therefore a reminder that though we do face real ecological thresholds and boundaries, it is not too late to wrest a world of radical abundance from capital. 14/15
September 22, 2025 at 2:46 PM
We can't afford the rich. Wealth taxes would degrow their crass, wasteful and ostentatious displays of private wealth and fund efficient, quality and beautiful universal public services.
- The richest 1% of European citizens have an average carbon footprint of 55 tons/year
- The richest 10%: 22 tons/year
- The bottom 50%: 7 tons/year

🌍 The IPCC prescribes under 2.5 tons by 2030.
September 22, 2025 at 1:56 PM
The results are in on the UK's experiment in extreme privatization. It's costing the British public a lot and one of the main reasons everythings so expensive and doesn't work anymore.
Few countries have been privatised as deep or as far as in Britain.

This failed experiment has shaped your life.

To learn how, explore our new project — Who Owns Britain? — at the link below.

Who Owns Britain?
How the radical experiment of privatisation transformed society and reshaped our lives.
www.common-wealth.org
September 19, 2025 at 3:23 PM
Huw Lemmey makes a case that anyone committed to the principles of democracy can't deny without becoming an authoritarian. The UK government has recently taken a huge stride towards a totally authoritarian state. How long until protest is banned altogether?
July 18, 2025 at 2:58 PM
A necessary remedy to the lack of ambition when it comes to rethinking public services.
In the first blog of a new series to mark the launch of our UBS Hub, Phil Jones expands on the core concept of public luxury by looking back to the 'British Restaurant'👇

buff.ly/XTI42MX
From basic services to public luxury
In the first blog of a new series for our UBS Hub, Phil Jones expands on the concept of public luxury through a reprisal of the 'British Restaurant'.
buff.ly
April 11, 2025 at 1:08 PM
Flattered to get a small footnote in this. My point is that capital's metabolism works across commodified and informal (minimally commodified) economic activities not only in "cities of the global South" but explicitly in the so-called "advanced economies" aswell. doi.org/10.1111/anti...
April 11, 2025 at 12:55 PM
Brilliant description of global production chains by Phil Neel in Brooklyn Rail.
brooklynrail.org/2024/12/fiel...
March 18, 2025 at 3:14 PM
The Portuguese artist Xavier Almeida drew from my article about informal recycling in Barcelona in his recent residency at B-Murals Centre d’Art Urba. A liitle description of the work including some pictures of the accompanying comic is here: benjaminirvineresearch.wordpress.com/2024/12/10/x...
Xavier Almeida´s “Cheap Nature, Residues of a Collapsing Society”
The Portuguese artist Xavier Almeida drew from my article about informal recycling in Barcelona “Working the waste commodity frontier” in his residency between September-December 2024 at B-Murals C…
benjaminirvineresearch.wordpress.com
February 10, 2025 at 4:05 PM