Basic Concepts
Actors and Institutions
Governance Complexity
Challenges & Opportunities
Theory and Frameworks
100

What is gentrification?

Urban redevelopment that displaces low-income residents.

100

Name one international organization involved in gentrification governance.

UN-Habitat or the World Bank.

100

What are the three dimensions of governance complexity?

Scale, diversity, and density.

100

What is one challenge of governance complexity in gentrification?

Power imbalances or lack of accountability.

100

What does GGC stand for?

Global Governance Complex.

200

Why is gentrification considered a governance problem?

Because it involves many actors with different interests and power

200

Which actors are part of the “global governance architecture”?

IGOs, national governments, city governments, private investors, NGOs.

200

What does “forum shopping” mean in this context?

When actors choose the institution that gives them the best advantage.

200

What is one opportunity that comes from having many actors involved?

Access to more resources, knowledge, and innovation.

200

What does the idea of a Global Governance Complex describe?

It describes how different international and transnational institutions overlap and work together on the same global issue.

300

What happens to low-income residents when gentrification occurs?

They are often forced to move out of their neighborhoods.

300

What kind of actors can be public, private, formal, or informal?

City governments, NGOs, companies, and community groups.

300

What does density mean in the GGC Cube?

How strongly the actors are connected through networks and shared ideas.

300

How do power asymmetries affect local communities?

Rich investors gain influence while poor communities lose voice.

300

According to Biermann, what makes global governance fragmented?

Too many public and private institutions with overlapping mandates.

400

How does globalization influence gentrification?

Through international capital and shared city models like “smart city.”

400

What is an example of a city or NGO role in this governance system?

Cities implement housing policy, NGOs protect community rights.

400

Why do many institutions make coordination difficult?

Because too many rules and interests make cooperation slow.

400

Give one example of a solution or innovation promoted by NGOs.

Community land trusts or social housing programs.

400

What are the three possible outcomes of fragmentation?

Conflict, coexistence, or cooperation.

500

How does gentrification connect the local and the global levels?

Local housing changes are influenced by global markets, international banks, and global urban agendas like the SDGs.

500

How do private investors and international banks influence local housing policies?

They provide funding and investment that often prioritize profit over social inclusion, shaping city development decisions

500

What is the goal of the Global Governance Complexity Cube?

To analyze how many actors there are, how diverse they are, and how connected they are, to understand if cooperation or conflict happens.

500

How can global norms like SDG 11 help reduce gentrification’s negative effects?

They set international principles for inclusive, sustainable cities and give communities tools to demand fair development.

500

What determines whether governance in gentrification is fair or unfair?

The balance of power, coordination among actors, and how strong the norms protecting vulnerable people are.