16 min 23 sec

Abolish Rent: How Tenants Can End the Housing Crisis

By Tracy Rosenthal, Leonardo Vilchis

Abolish Rent challenges the modern housing system, exposing how profit-driven real estate exploits tenants and advocating for a radical shift toward housing as a guaranteed human right rather than a commodity.

Table of Content

Imagine standing on a street in Los Angeles. On one side of the city, there is a residence known as the world’s most expensive home—a sprawling mansion valued at $340 million, boasting five swimming pools and forty-two bathrooms. It is a monument to excess and wealth. But if you look toward the streets of that same city, you encounter a different, darker reality. On average, five unhoused people die every single day in Los Angeles. This staggering contrast is not an accident or a temporary glitch in the system. It is the defining feature of a housing market that has shifted its focus away from shelter and toward the extraction of massive profits.

In our current era, more people than ever before find themselves as part of the “tenant class.” Historically, this group has been composed largely of immigrants and people of color, but today, the boundaries are expanding. Homeownership, once considered a hallmark of the middle class, is increasingly determined not by how much you earn, but by how much wealth your family already possesses. For everyone else, the reality is one of rising rents, the constant threat of displacement, and the instability of the rental market.

What this book proposes is that we need to stop viewing this crisis as an inevitable force of nature. It is a manufactured condition created by a system that serves a specific set of interests—namely, those of landlords, developers, and the officials who support them. However, there is a path forward. By looking at how the powerful unite to protect their assets, tenants can learn to unite to protect their lives. The goal isn’t just to lower the rent or fix a few leaks; it is to fundamentally transform our society so that stable, safe housing is treated as a basic human right for everyone. Over the next few minutes, we will explore how this system was built, how it maintains its grip on our lives, and how we can begin to dismantle it together.

Think the housing market is broken because you can’t afford rent? Discover why the system is actually working perfectly for those who own the land.

The history of American property isn’t just about buildings; it’s a long-standing policy of exclusion that still shapes who gets to have a home today.

When one person stops paying rent, they’re in trouble. When an entire building stops, the landlord is in trouble. Discover the mechanics of the rent strike.

Voting is a start, but it isn’t enough to solve the housing crisis. Learn why grassroots unions are the only way to challenge the real estate lobby.

What if your home wasn’t an investment for someone else? Explore how collective action is redefining our relationship with the land.

The road to housing justice is long, but it’s paved with the collective power of those who refuse to be displaced. Here is how we move forward.

The throughline of this exploration is clear: the housing crisis is a direct result of a system that values property and profit over the lives of human beings. We have seen how this system was built on a history of exclusion and how it continues to extract trillions of dollars from the labor of the tenant class. But we have also seen the incredible power that emerges when tenants refuse to be isolated and instead choose to organize.

The path forward is not found in waiting for the market to fix itself or for politicians to act on our behalf. It is found in the collective action of rent strikes, the building of robust tenant unions, and the reclamation of our neighborhoods as spaces for people rather than assets for investors. By treating housing as a fundamental human right, we can begin to dismantle the parasitic relationship between landlord and tenant.

As you walk away from this summary, consider your own relationship with your living space and your neighbors. The next time you see a rent increase or a neighbor facing displacement, remember that you are not alone. There is a growing movement of people who believe that a different world is possible—one where no one dies on the street while luxury mansions sit empty. The work of building that world starts with solidarity. It starts with the decision to stand together and demand a future where everyone has a secure place to call home. Together, we can transform housing from a source of stress into a foundation for a flourishing society.

About this book

What is this book about?

Abolish Rent offers a provocative analysis of the American housing crisis, arguing that the current system is not broken but is functioning exactly as intended—to extract wealth from the working class and funnel it to landlords and developers. By examining the historical roots of property ownership and the systematic exclusion of marginalized groups, the authors demonstrate how the dream of homeownership has been replaced by a reality of permanent tenancy and displacement. The book moves beyond mere critique, providing a blueprint for resistance through grassroots organizing and collective action. It highlights the power of tenant unions and rent strikes as tools to reclaim sovereignty over living spaces. The promise of the book is a vision of a future where housing is no longer a tool for financial speculation but a stable, protected human right. It encourages readers to stop seeing themselves as isolated consumers and start acting as a unified class capable of dismantling the structures that prioritize property values over human lives.

Book Information

Rating:

Genra:

Economics, Politics & Current Affairs, Real Estate & Property

Topics:

Economics, Inequality, Political Science, Public Policy, Sociology

Publisher:

Haymarket Books

Language:

English

Publishing date:

September 24, 2024

Lenght:

16 min 23 sec

About the Author

Tracy Rosenthal

Tracy Rosenthal and Leonardo Vilchis are cofounders of the Los Angeles Tenants Union, the largest tenants' organization in the United States, dedicated to fighting housing injustice and advocating for tenants' rights. Rosenthal is a writer and activist, while Vilchis has been a longtime community organizer, focusing on immigrant and tenant rights in Los Angeles.

Ratings & Reviews

Ratings at a glance

2.7

Overall score based on 39 ratings.

What people think

Listeners value this incisive examination because it successfully redefines housing as a basic human right instead of a market good. They describe the organizational structure as especially helpful, pointing out how the book draws on L.A. Tenants Union anecdotes to emphasize the impact of communal bonds and joint efforts. Furthermore, listeners applaud the "fiery" systemic assessment of the leasing economy, with one listener noting that the authors powerfully characterize rent as a "tribute to those with generational wealth." They also point to the motivating examples of aggressive tenant unions, as another listener calls the work both a radicalizing polemic and an invaluable manual for housing justice.

Top reviews

Sirichai

This book is a masterclass in what organizing looks like when you stop asking nicely for crumbs. Rosenthal and Vilchis don’t just complain about the housing market; they dismantle the very idea that shelter should be an asset for someone else's profit. The way they frame rent as a 'tribute' paid to generational wealth hit me like a ton of bricks. It’s a fiery, unapologetic look at how the LA Tenants Union built real power through 'spadework'—that slow, intentional relationship building that most modern movements ignore. I especially loved the section on Echo Park Rise Up. It serves as both a beautiful vision of what a de-commodified world could look like and a sobering reminder of how the state uses police as the enforcement arm for private property. If you’re tired of hearing that the only solution is to build more luxury condos, read this immediately.

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Pruet

Picked this up after seeing a thread about the LA Tenants Union and I was not prepared for how hard it hits. The authors argue that the housing crisis isn't a glitch in the system—it is the system. They describe rent as an inherently extractive mechanism that siphons wages from the working class to the pockets of bosses and landlords. It’s a radicalizing guide that makes you realize housing is more than just an issue; it’s where we make our lives together. The 'spadework' concept from Ella Baker is woven in beautifully, emphasizing that real change happens in the hallways of apartment buildings, not just in city hall. This is the kind of political education that actually feels useful for organizers on the ground. It’s easily one of the most important books Haymarket has published this year.

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Natnicha

Wow, I haven’t felt this fired up about a piece of political theory in years. This isn't some dry academic text; it’s a radicalizing manual for action that treats the struggle for housing as a literal fight for survival. The authors use the L.A. Tenants Union as a blueprint to show how we can move from defensive eviction prevention to proactive social housing. The Hillside Villa campaign was a standout chapter for me, showing how tenants can actually leverage policy to force the city to buy buildings back from predatory landlords. It’s about 're-capturing' what should have been ours all along. The writing style is punchy and direct, making complex economic theories feel intuitive. If you believe that housing is a human right, full stop, no exceptions, then you need this on your shelf.

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Alejandra

I’m still processing the Echo Park case study, which was a gut-punch of both beauty and state-sanctioned violence. The authors do such an incredible job of illustrating prefigurative politics—building the world we want to see within the shell of the old one. They don’t just tell you that another world is possible; they show you the people who are already building it through DIY support networks and collective security. The quote about tree roots breaking up the sidewalk is such a perfect metaphor for the patient work of organizing. This book successfully bridges the gap between anarchism and communism without the usual infighting, which is a huge plus. It’s a fiery polemic that manages to be both deeply theoretical and incredibly practical. Abolish rent, indeed!

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Teng

After hearing Rosenthal speak on a podcast, I knew I needed the full manual. Abolish Rent doesn't pull any punches. It defines the rent relation as inherently extractive, and it rejects the neoclassical economic fixes that politicians love to tout. The authors make a compelling case that 'the housing crisis is not a problem to be solved, but a class struggle to be fought and won.' This book gave me the language to talk about my own situation as a tenant without feeling like a victim. It’s about building power. The strategies for demand letters and rent strikes are presented with the conviction of people who have actually been in the trenches. Highly recommended for anyone who is sick of seeing their neighbors displaced by luxury developments and 'real estate' greed.

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Cha

Ever wonder why the 'build more' solution never seems to actually lower your monthly payment? Abolish Rent provides a sharp, Marxist analysis that explains how government subsidies often just end up as payoffs for landlords rather than relief for tenants. I found the distinction between 'renters' and 'tenants' particularly useful for my own political education. While the book is very focused on the L.A. context, the lessons about collective care and mutual aid are universal. To be fair, some of the theoretical sections get a bit dense and might be a hurdle for casual readers, but the case studies like Hillside Villa bring the theory back down to earth. It’s a confrontational manual that demands you pick a side in the class struggle. It’s not just about housing policy; it’s about reclaiming our dignity from the real estate state.

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Sin

Finally got around to reading this Haymarket title and the Marxist analysis is absolutely chef’s kiss. It’s refreshing to read a book that doesn’t shy away from the 'C' word—communism. The authors define it simply as 'community working together,' which feels so much more accessible than a dusty textbook. They do a great job of explaining how rent acts as a crisis in itself, a culmination of land enclosure and debt. I did feel that the chapters on movement lawyers and nonprofits were a little cynical, though I understand their point about the police being the enforcers of eviction. The book transitions seamlessly from historical context to practical tactics like rent strikes. It’s a must-read for anyone hungry for housing justice solutions that don't just further enrich developers. It really makes you rethink your relationship to the place you live.

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Wan

The chapter on the 'real estate state' completely changed how I look at my own neighborhood. I used to think gentrification was just an inevitable force of nature, but Rosenthal and Vilchis show it’s a calculated result of municipal austerity and speculative trading. They argue convincingly that we need to stop viewing our homes as commodities and start seeing them as shared resources. Personally, I found the section on organizing among unhoused people to be the most profound. It reflected so many conversations I’ve had with folks in my own community about the violence of the eviction machine. My only minor gripe is that the tone can be a bit repetitive regarding the 'eviction-driven machine,' but the message is so vital I didn't mind too much. It’s a trenchant, confrontational, and deeply necessary piece of work.

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Wachira

As someone who has volunteered with housing nonprofits, this was a necessary, if uncomfortable, reality check. The authors are quite critical of the nonprofit industrial complex, arguing that these organizations often stifle militant action in favor of manageable reforms. It’s a tough pill to swallow but the evidence they provide from the LATU campaigns is hard to argue with. The book is incredibly sharp in its dissection of how rent siphons wealth from the working class to sustain an unjust system. I appreciated the historical grounding, from colonial land theft to modern-day austerity. It’s a bit of a dense read at times, and the focus is very L.A.-centric, but the framework for relationship-building as the foundation for grassroots power is something every organizer should study.

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Sumalee

To be fair, while the passion here is undeniable, the framework feels almost exclusively tied to the specific legal and social landscape of the United States. If you live outside the US, this reads more like a dystopian warning than a practical manual you can apply tomorrow. The authors are clearly experienced organizers, and their critique of the 'real estate state' is biting, but I found the dismissal of almost all policy reform to be a bit too dogmatic at times. I appreciate the emphasis on housing as a human right, but I struggled with the total rejection of any solution that involves working within existing systems. That said, the section on the Echo Park occupation was incredibly moving. It’s a solid 3.5 stars for me—great for theory and inspiration, though perhaps less 'achievable' for those in different political climates.

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