Ordinary justice in extraordinary times: Legal reasoning and the everyday geopolitics of urban displacement
Sarah Klosterkamp
Environment and Planning C, 2026, vol. 44, issue 4, 714-731
Abstract:
This article explores the geopolitics of the everyday through eviction hearings in Germany’s lower district courts. Based on 24 months of ethnographic fieldwork, it examines how judges, through routinized legal reasoning, enact powerful spatial decisions in proceedings that often last under 15 minutes. Through three contrasting cases, the paper shows how assessments of responsibility and perceived deservingness shape judicial discretion and produce uneven vulnerabilities to displacement. Far from discrete legal events, these micro-judgments operate as forms of slow violence, incrementally reproducing the structural conditions of financialized housing and urban precarity. Bringing legal geography into conversation with feminist and urban geopolitical scholarship, the article conceptualizes the court as a state apparatus that normalizes and administers tenant–landlord disputes. Here, urban displacement is not only permitted—it is made ordinary. The paper contributes to debates on how legal infrastructures, procedural rhythms, and ordinary decision-making practices shape the political economy and lived geopolitics of urban space.
Keywords: legal reasoning; housing inequality; urban displacement; feminist legal geography; everyday geopolitics (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2026
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:sae:envirc:v:44:y:2026:i:4:p:714-731
DOI: 10.1177/23996544251412143
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