• Date and time: Wednesday 26 March 2025, 3.30pm to 4.30pm
  • Location: In-person only
    LMB/037X, Law and Sociology Building, Campus East, University of York (Map)
  • Audience: Open to alumni, staff, students, the public
  • Admission: Free admission, booking required

Book tickets

Event details

Squatting in London has a rich and diverse history. Today, squatters live a marginalised, stigmatised and criminalised existence, yet they persist. Behind the glittering façade of shiny new buildings, London is a network of vacant offices, boarded-up shops and dilapidated pubs that host some of the city's poorest and most determined citizens, exiled and increasingly pushed to the margins.

Squatting London is an account of the real lives of the city's squatters: their ambitions and struggles. Squatting is a challenge to the logic of property which underpins the city. By finding refuge, staying put, creating spaces and participating in counter-cultures, squats are political acts. They sit in direct opposition to the speculation, gentrification and regeneration that controls London today.

From wasted office blocks transformed into a life-saving homeless shelter, to temporary art exhibitions and raves; from an empty doctor's surgery, to a library closed by cuts; from mutual aid networks set up during the pandemic, to restaurants, shops, offices and pubs - Squatting London is an alternative, underground and rebellious ethnographic account of a city you thought you already knew.

About the speaker

Samuel Burgum

Dr Samuel Burgum is Senior Lecturer in Sociology at Birmingham City University. He is the author of Occupying London: Post-Crash Resistance and the Limits of Possibility, and is Principal Investigator on an ESRC-funded project, 'Narrow Margins', which focuses on the criminalization of trespass and the squeeze upon marginalised communities in England and Wales.

Venue details

  • Wheelchair accessible

Contact

Anna Strhan