housing. studying housing different approaches: describing and analyzing government policy in...

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Page 1: HOUSING. Studying housing Different approaches: Describing and analyzing government policy in reference to housing  legislative and institutional structure

HOUSING

Page 2: HOUSING. Studying housing Different approaches: Describing and analyzing government policy in reference to housing  legislative and institutional structure

Studying housingDifferent approaches: Describing and analyzing government policy in

reference to housing legislative and institutional structure of housing

Neo-classical economical approach focusing on housing market

Geographical approach: spatial distribution of housing Sociological approach: choices and constraints

dynamic

Page 3: HOUSING. Studying housing Different approaches: Describing and analyzing government policy in reference to housing  legislative and institutional structure

Defining Home“Home signifies an emotional attachment. It connotes a relatively permanent place of refuge where people find comfort, a base from where they can safely explore the outer world. It is something to which people like to return” (Van Vliet, 1978)

“The home is that spatially localized, temporally defined, significant and autonomous physical frame and conceptual system for the ordering, transformation and interpretation of the physical and abstract aspects of domestic daily life at several simultaneous spatio-temporal scales, normally activated by the connection to a person or a community such as a nuclear family” (Benjamin, 1995)

Page 4: HOUSING. Studying housing Different approaches: Describing and analyzing government policy in reference to housing  legislative and institutional structure

Does neighbourhood still matter in a globalized

world?SCALE FUNCTIONS MECHANISMS

Home area Psycho-social benefits (identity-belonging…)

Familiarity, Community

Locality Residential activities, social status, local policies

Planning, service provision, housing market

Urban district or region

Landscape of social and economic opportunities

Employment connections, leisure interests, social networks

Page 5: HOUSING. Studying housing Different approaches: Describing and analyzing government policy in reference to housing  legislative and institutional structure

Neighbourhood characteristics (Galster)

• Structural characteristics of the residential and non-residential buildings • Infrastructural characteristics: roads, sidewalks, utility services, etc. • Demographic characteristics of the residential population: income, occupation and educational position • Tax/public service package characteristic: the quality of safety forces, public schools, public administration, politics and recreation • Environmental characteristics: degree of land, air, water and noise pollution

Page 6: HOUSING. Studying housing Different approaches: Describing and analyzing government policy in reference to housing  legislative and institutional structure

• Proximity characteristics: access to major destinations of employment, entertainment, shopping, etc. • Political characteristics: the degree to which local political networks are mobilized , residents' influence in local affairs through spatially rooted channels • Social interactive characteristics: local friends, network, degree of inter-household familiarity, type and quality of interpersonal associations, residents' perceive commonality• Sentimental characteristics: residents' sense of identification

with place, historical significance of such identification, historical significance of buildings and districts

Page 7: HOUSING. Studying housing Different approaches: Describing and analyzing government policy in reference to housing  legislative and institutional structure

Meanings and functions of housing

“A house is to be considered as a cultural and social unit of space created to support a way of life”

cultureactivitie

s lifestyle

many standards are not universal and what constitutes good housing varies by culture

Page 8: HOUSING. Studying housing Different approaches: Describing and analyzing government policy in reference to housing  legislative and institutional structure

Housing exclusion and segregation

Spatial segregation can be explained briefly as a process by which disadvantaged ethnic, cultural, and racial minorities become concentrated in one area and this leads to the rupturing of social cohesion and leading to the cracks in social and urban structure that are often reinforced by activities (such as crime) that reinforce special segregation. In these cracks, poverty, lack of urban services, absence of decent housing conditions, low employment levels, and crime increasingly reinforce each other (Castells & Borja, 1997)

Page 9: HOUSING. Studying housing Different approaches: Describing and analyzing government policy in reference to housing  legislative and institutional structure

Housing and immigrationHousing conditions of migrants in Europe:

a persistent ethnic inequality in housing access; the presence of ethnic minorities in deprived

neighborhoods; the growing tension given by the seemingly increasing

ethnic concentrations in Europeans cities; and new problems of discrimination regarding the second or

the third generation and the extension of social exclusion