- Home
- Social Science
- Poverty & Homelessness
- Housing Inc. (A Global Takeover and Our Fight for Home)
Housing Inc. (A Global Takeover and Our Fight for Home)
| Expected release date is Sep 8th 2026 |
- Availability: Confirm prior to ordering
- Branding: minimum 50 pieces (add’l costs below)
- Check Freight Rates (branded products only)
Branding Options (v), Availability & Lead Times
- 1-Color Imprint: $2.00 ea.
- Promo-Page Insert: $2.50 ea. (full-color printed, single-sided page)
- Belly-Band Wrap: $2.50 ea. (full-color printed)
- Set-Up Charge: $45 per decoration
- Availability: Product availability changes daily, so please confirm your quantity is available prior to placing an order.
- Branded Products: allow 10 business days from proof approval for production. Branding options may be limited or unavailable based on product design or cover artwork.
- Unbranded Products: allow 3-5 business days for shipping. All Unbranded items receive FREE ground shipping in the US. Inquire for international shipping.
- RETURNS/CANCELLATIONS: All orders, branded or unbranded, are NON-CANCELLABLE and NON-RETURNABLE once a purchase order has been received.
Product Details
Overview
Housing has become a crisis of humanity—one created by design and decades in the making.
Who counts and who doesn’t in the world of housing and real estate? The decisive answer by financial and political elites is that people are math equations and homes are instruments of profit. It is an answer that betrays the essential truth that housing is fundamental to existence.
Across six continents, Leilani Farha enters the homes oof people deemed disposable—families who’ve been evicted, those living in neighbourhoods remade for the rich, people criminalized for having nowhere to live. Through these intimate encounters and her own reckoning from the centre of global housing debates, Farha reveals the ideology at work: the same logic that justifies dispossessing Indigenous Peoples of their lands and resources now prices out young people, displaces tenants, destroys communities, and disappears homeless people.
Writing with fierce clarity, Farha connects these stories with her own reflections on power, complicity, and the limits of reform to spark our fight to get back home and build a new ideology—one rooted in laws, humanity, and imagination, where home is the foundation of justice.









