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Chapter 1 Housing careers, intergenerational support and family relations
Authors: ---
Year: 2019 Publisher: Taylor & Francis

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Abstract

The home and family have always been mutually embedded, withthe former central to the realization and reproduction of the latter.More recently, this mutuality has taken on a more critical salience asrealignments in housing markets, employment and welfare states inmany countries have worked together to undermine housing accessfor new households. In this context, families have become increasinglyinvolved in smoothening the routes of young adults members upthe ‘housing ladder’ into home ownership. Intergenerational supportappears to have become much more widespread and not just confi nedto familialistic welfare regimes. The role of intergenerational supportfor housing remains, however, highly diff erentiated across countries,cities and regions, as well as uneven between social and incomeclasses. This introduction to the Special Issue explores how the roleof housing wealth transfers has impacted the renegotiation of thegenerational contract. In doing so, it sets the scene for the articlesthat follow, each of which contribute signifi cantly to advancingunderstanding of housing as a key driver of contemporary socialrelations and inequalities.


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Competition between social and private rental housing
Authors: ---
ISBN: 129933346X 1614991936 9781614991939 1614991928 Year: 2013 Publisher: Amsterdam : Cambridge University Press,

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In the context of shifting regulatory approaches and changing provision structures in many Western rental housing systems, the notion of competition between social and private rental housing has received increasing attention from practitioners and academic researchers. This thesis explores and theorises the concept of inter-tenure competition in order to advance understanding of what it means in local and national market realities, as well as in business and political practices. Results indicate that competition in mixed markets is a complex matter, much of which is explained by the distinctive properties of social and private rental services. Inter-tenure competition is shown to be the interplay of structural and political conditions, individual and organisational business goals, and the perceptions and strategic decisions of both providers and consumers. The results suggest that the degree of competition relates to specific points in time and is mainly a question of which rental market segment one is looking at.

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