AdamsDTiesdellS (2010)
Planners as market actors: Rethinking state–market relations in land and property.Planning Theory & Practice11(2): 187–207.
2.
Antwi A and Henneberry J (1995) Developers, non-linearity and asymmetry in the development cycle. Journal of Property Research 12(3): 217–239.
3.
ArrighiG (2007) Adam Smith in Beijing: Lineages of the Twenty-First Century.
London:
Verso.
4.
BallM (2002)
Cultural explanation of regional property markets: A critique.Urban Studies39(8): 1453–1469.
5.
BallardRHarrisonP (2019) Transnational urbanism interrupted: A Chinese developer’s attempts to secure approval to build the ‘New York of Africa’ at Modderfontein, Johannesburg. Environment and Planning A: Economy and Space 52(2).
6.
BoggsJSRantisiNM (2003)
The ‘relational turn’ in economic geography.Journal of Economic Geography3(2): 109–116.
7.
BrillF (2019) Complexity and coordination in London’s Silvertown Quays: How real estate developers (re)centred themselves in the planning process. Environment and Planning A: Economy and Space 52(2).
8.
BuckleyM (2014)
On the work of urbanization: Migration, construction labor, and the commodity moment.Annals of the Association of American Geographers104(2): 338–347.
9.
ButcherS (2019) Appropriating rent from greenfield affordable housing: Developer practices in Johannesburg. Environment and Planning A: Economy and Space 52(2).
10.
CharneyI (2003)
Spatial fix and spatial substitutability practices among Canada’s largest office development firms.Urban Geography24(5): 386–409.
11.
CoiacettoE (2001)
Diversity in real estate developer behaviour: A case for research.Urban Policy and Research19(1): 43–59.
12.
CookIEvansJGriffithsH, et al. (2007)
‘It’s more than just what it is’: Defetishising commodities, expanding fields, mobilising change…Geoforum38(6): 1113–1126.
13.
DavisH (2006) The Culture of Building.
New York:
Oxford University Press.
14.
FainsteinSS (2001) The City Builders: Property Development in New York and London, 1980–2000, 2nd ed.Lawrence:
University Press of Kansas.
15.
GereffiGHumphreyJKaplinskyR, et al. (2009)
Introduction: Globalisation, value chains and development.IDS Bulletin32(3): 1–8.
16.
GrabherG (2002)
The project ecology of advertising: Tasks, talents and teams.Regional Studies36(3): 245–262.
17.
GuySHenneberryJRowleyS (2002)
Development cultures and urban regeneration.Urban Studies39(7): 1181–1196.
18.
HalbertLRouanetH (2014)
Filtering risk away: Global finance capital, transcalar territorial networks and the (un)making of city-regions: An analysis of business property development in Bangalore, India.Regional Studies48(3): 471–484.
19.
HallS (1980)
Race, articulation and societies structured in dominance. In: UNESCO (ed.) Sociological Theories: Race and Colonialism.
Paris:
Unesco, 205–345.
20.
HamannC (2018) Change in residential buildings. Map of the month, October.
Johannesburg:
Gauteng City-Region Observatory.
HarveyD (2006) The Limits to Capital.
London and New York:
Verso.
23.
HealeyP (1994)
Urban policy and property development: The institutional relations of real-estate development in an old industrial region.Environment and Planning A26(2): 177–198.
24.
HenneberryJParrisS (2013)
The embedded developer: Using project ecologies to analyse local property development networks.Town Planning Review84(2): 227–250.
25.
HerbertCWMurrayMJ (2015)
Building from scratch: New cities, privatized urbanism and the spatial restructuring of Johannesburg after apartheid.International Journal of Urban and Regional Research39(3): 471–494.
26.
HopkinsTKWallersteinI (1986)
Commodity chains in the world-economy prior to 1800.Review (Fernand Braudel Center)10(1): 157–170.
27.
HuchzermeyerM (2011) Tenement Cities: From 19th Century Berlin to 21st Century Nairobi.
Trenton, NJ:
Africa World Press.
28.
LeffersDWekerleGR (2019) Land developers as institutional and postpolitical actors: Sites of power in land use policy and planning. Environment and Planning A: Economy and Space 52(2).
29.
LoganJRMolotchH (2007) Urban Fortunes: The Political Economy of Place.
Berkeley:
University of California Press.
30.
MohamedR (2006)
The psychology of residential developers: Lessons from behavioral economics and additional explanations for satisficing.Journal of Planning Education and Research26(1): 28–37.
31.
MosselsonA (2019) Habitus, spatial capital and making place: Housing developers and the spatial praxis of Johannesburg’s inner-city regeneration. Environment and Planning A: Economy and Space 52(2).
32.
MoutonMShatkinG (2019) Strategizing the for-profit city: The state, developers, and urban production in Mega Manila. Environment and Planning A: Economy and Space 52(2).
33.
Murray M (2008) Taming the Disorderly City: The Spatial Landscape of Johannesburg after Apartheid. Icatha: Cornell University Press.
34.
NaidooY (2019) Industrial and commercial buildings. Map of the month, July. Johannesburg: Gauteng-City Region Observatory.
35.
PeckJ (2017)
Transatlantic city, part 1: Conjunctural urbanism.Urban Studies54(1): 4–30.
RobinsonJ (2016)
Thinking cities through elsewhere: Comparative tactics for a more global urban studies.Progress in Human Geography40(1): 3–29.
38.
RouanetHHalbertL (2016)
Leveraging finance capital: Urban change and self-empowerment of real estate developers in India.Urban Studies53(7): 1401–1423.
39.
RSA (Republic of South Africa) (2012) National Development Plan 2030: Our Future – Make It Work.
Pretoria:
The Presidency, Republic of South Africa.
40.
RSA (2016) Integrated Urban Development Framework: A New Deal for South African Cities and Towns.
Pretoria:
Department of Cooperative Governance and Traditional Affairs.
41.
SanfeliciDHalbertL (2018)
Financial market actors as urban policy-makers: The case of real estate investment trusts in Brazil.Urban Geography40(1): 83–103.
42.
Searle LG (2013) Conflict and Commensuration: Contested Market Making in India's Private Real Estate Development Sector. International Journal of Urban and Regional Research 38(1): 60–78.
43.
Searle LG (2016) Landscapes of Accumulation: Real Estate and the Neoliberal Imagination in Contemporary India. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
44.
TheurillatTCrevoisierO (2014)
Sustainability and the anchoring of capital: Negotiations surrounding two major urban projects in Switzerland.Regional Studies48(3): 501–515.
45.
TodesARobinsonJ (2019)
Re-directing developers: New models of rental housing development to re-shape the post-apartheid city?Environment and Planning A: Economy and Space 52(2).
46.
WattsM (2014) Commodities. In: ClokePCrangPGoodwinM (eds) Introducing Human Geographies, 3rd ed.
Abingdon and New York:
Routledge, 391–412.
47.
WeberR (2015) From Boom to Bubble: How Finance Built the New Chicago.
Chicago:
University of Chicago Press.
48.
WeinsteinL (2008)
Mumbai’s development mafias: Globalization, organized crime and land development.International Journal of Urban and Regional Research32(1): 22–39.
49.
YeungHW (2005)
Rethinking relational economic geography.Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers30(1): 37–51.