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Political organizing and narrative framing in the sharing economyAirbnb host clubs in New York City

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  • Filip Stabrowski

Abstract

As cities accommodate, resist, and negotiate with the spread of so-called ‘sharing economy’ companies, the question of how these businesses actively construct new markets (or sub-markets) through political mobilization and rhetorical strategy has become increasingly salient. This paper explores the ways in which the home-sharing platform Airbnb has sought to carve out a regulatory and discursive space for operation through the political mobilization of its ‘hosts’ in New York City. Based on nearly two years of ethnographic research, the paper argues that host clubs are not merely top-down transmission belts for the company’s political lobbying strategy; beyond political organizing, they are also sites in which the very practices of hosting through Airbnb are affirmed, rehearsed, learned, and debated. On the one hand, Airbnb host clubs are both physical embodiments of, and mechanisms for, the narrative framing of ‘home-sharing’ as a particular kind of economic activity that is more democratic, inclusive, and sustainable than the traditional hospitality industry. On the other hand, Airbnb host clubs reveal and reflect the tensions – between hosts and Airbnb, and among hosts themselves – that persist over the practice of home-sharing. As the calls for tighter regulation and increased penalties for illegal short-term rentals continue to grow, however, the question of whether host clubs constitute a viable mechanism for political mobilization and regulatory reform remains an open one.

Suggested Citation

  • Filip Stabrowski, 2022. "Political organizing and narrative framing in the sharing economyAirbnb host clubs in New York City," City, Taylor & Francis Journals, vol. 26(1), pages 142-159, January.
  • Handle: RePEc:taf:cityxx:v:26:y:2022:i:1:p:142-159
    DOI: 10.1080/13604813.2021.2018853
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