Cross-disciplinary and critical in its approach,
The SAGE Handbook of Housing Studies is an elucidating look at the key issues within the field. It covers the study of housing retrospectively, but also analyses the future directions of research and theory, demonstrating how it can contribute to wider debates in the social sciences. A comprehensive introductory chapter is followed by four parts offering complete coverage of the area:
- Markets: examines the perception of housing markets, how they function in different contexts, and the importance of housing behaviour and neighbourhoods
- Approaches: looks at how other disciplines – economics, geography, and sociology – have informed the direction of housing studies
- Context: traces the interactions between housing studies and other aspects of society, providing context to debate housing through issues of space, social, welfare and the environment.
- Policy: is a multi-disciplinary and comprehensive take on the major policy issues and the causes and possible solutions of housing problems such as regeneration and homelessness.
Tabla de materias
Preface
PART ONE: HOUSING MARKETS – Kenneth Gibb
Understanding Housing Markets: Real Progress or Stalled Agendas? – Duncan Mac Lennan
House-Building and Housing Supply – Michael Ball
Housing Behaviour – Maarten van Ham
Residential Mobility and the Housing Market – William A.V. Clark
Neighbourhoods and Their Role in Creating and Changing Housing – George Galster
PART TWO: APPROACHES – David Clapham
The Neo-Liberal Legacy to Housing Research – Christine M. E. Whitehead
Institutional Economics – Kenneth Gibb
Social Geographic Interpretations of Housing Spaces – Tim Butler and Chris Hamnett
Social Policy Approaches to Housing Research – David Clapham
Social Constructionism and beyond in Housing Research – David Clapham
A Review of Structurally Inspired Approaches in Housing Studies: Concepts, Contributions and Future Perspectives – Julie Lawson
Housing Politics and Political Science – Bo Bengtsson
People: Environment Studies – Roderick Lawrence
PART THREE: CONTEXT – William A. V. Clark
Housing and the Economy – Geoffrey Meen
Housing and Welfare Regimes – Walter Matznetter and Alexis Mundt
Housing Markets, the Life Course and Migration up and down the Urban Hierarchy – Christopher Bitter and David A. Plane
Housing and Social Life – Ray Forrest
Housing: From Low Energy to Zero Carbon – Phillip Jones
PART FOUR: POLICY ISSUES – Kenneth Gibb
Homelessness – Suzanne Fitzpatrick
Affordable Housing – Chris Leishman and Steven Rowley
Housing Subsidies – Judith Yates
Ethnic Residential Segregation: Reflections on Concepts, Levels and Effects – Sako Musterd
Social Consequences of Residential Segregation and Mixed Neighbourhoods – Ronald van Kempen and Gideon Bolt
Managing Social Housing – Hugo Priemus
Conclusion – David Clapham
Sobre el autor
William Clark is the Harvey Brooks Professor of International Science, Public Policy and Human Development at Harvard University’s John F. Kennedy School of Government. Trained as an ecologist, his research focuses on the interactions of environment, development and health concerns in international affairs. At Harvard, he currently co-directs the Sustainability Science Program. He is co-author of Adaptive environmental assessment and management (Wiley, 1978), and Redesigning rural development (Hopkins, 1982); editor of the Carbon dioxide review (Oxford, 1982); coeditor of Sustainable development of the biosphere (Cambridge, 1986), The earth transformed by human action (Cambridge, 1990), Learning to manage global environmental risks (MIT, 2001), Global Environmental Assessments (MIT, 2006) and The global health system: Institutions in a time of transition (Harvard, 2010); and co-chair of the US National Research Council’s study Our Common Journey: A Transition Toward Sustainability (NAP, 1999). He serves on the editorial board of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Science. Clark is a member of the National Academy of Sciences and a Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science. He is a recipient of the Mac Arthur Prize, the Humboldt Prize, the Kennedy School’s Carballo Award for excellence in teaching, and the Harvard College Phi Beta Kappa Prize for Excellence in Teaching.