Jessie Speer
@jessiespeer
I am an Assistant Professor in the Department of Geography and Environment at the London School of Economics. My research examines how unhoused people contest normative domesticity and capitalist housing markets. My book Bulldozed: Homeless Encampments and the Politics of Demolition shows how a combination of profit, punishment, and prejudice has produced a new "bulldozer approach" to homelessness in the United States, in ways that mirror the demolition of informal settlements across the globe. Other research projects include literary analysis of memoirs of homelessness and legal analysis of the nexus between migration and housing displacement in the United Kingdom. Open-access versions of my publications are available here. I am currently developing new research on arts-based housing justice. As an artist, my own practice centres hand-cut collage, using discarded imagery to construct whimsical, absurd, and dreamlike visual worlds. These works mobilise humour, surrealism, and fragmentation to produce a form of political satire that interrogates the role of play in a world marked by relations of power. I recently completed a self-published art book Safe, Here, Now on the intersection of collage and mind-body healing. As a somatic practitioner, I explore embodiment as a site of political agency.