ABSTRACT
Housing Policy in Europe provides a comprehensive introduction to the economic, political and social issues of housing across the continent.
The changing policy and practice of housing in fifteen countries from across Northern, Western, Southern and Central Europe are described, analyzed and compared.
The book explains why different systems of tenure are dominant in different groups of countries, and the extent to which housing policies within these countries conform to different welfare systems.
It reveals how owner-occupation has taken over from social housing as the chosen system of tenure and how this reflects a political and economic shift, from social democracy or communism to neo-liberalism across Europe.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
chapter |22 pages
INTRODUCTION
part |2 pages
Part I: The primacy of private rented housing
chapter |11 pages
INTRODUCTION TO PRIVATE RENTED HOUSING
chapter |15 pages
SWITZERLAND
chapter |16 pages
GERMANY
part |2 pages
Part II: The promotion of social housing
chapter |15 pages
INTRODUCTION TO SOCIAL HOUSING
chapter |15 pages
THE NETHERLANDS
chapter |14 pages
SWEDEN
chapter |12 pages
AUSTRIA
chapter |22 pages
FRANCE
part |2 pages
Part III: The dominance of owner-occupation
chapter |14 pages
INTRODUCTION TO OWNER-OCCUPATION
chapter |7 pages
IRELAND
chapter |18 pages
SPAIN
chapter |22 pages
ITALY
chapter |19 pages
THE UNITED KINGDON
part |2 pages
Part IV: Housing in transition