For over two decades British public policy has been fuelled by the notion that markets are the most effective way to accumulate and distribute resources. Such markets are driven by price, respond to ability to pay, and are not, for the most part, seen as having a welfare role. Using the example of housing, and drawing on lay experiences of ill health, the authors suggest that British households do, nevertheless, look to markets (in this example, to owner-occupation) to meet some welfare needs. Households value, in particular, the qualities of flexibility and security which they associate with homeownership and which promise both practical and psychosocial gains. However, there is a notable gap between what people aspire to and what they can...
This paper conceptualises housing wealth and welfare across the life course. Drawing from the empiri...
Housing markets have multiple interactions with the rest of the economy and these are surveyed in th...
The British social rented sector has been characterised as operating like a socialist 'command' syst...
Markets are mechanisms for distributing goods and services according to people's ability to pay. The...
Markets are mechanisms for distributing goods and services according to people's ability to pay. The...
Markets are mechanisms for distributing goods and services according to people's ability to pay. The...
Housing is widely regarded as playing an important role in the mediation and management of health in...
The theory and practice of social welfare has been radically redefined in every part of the develope...
The positive health effects of owner-occupation, compared to renting, are well documented. But home ...
Housing is widely regarded as playing an important role in the mediation and management of health in...
The politics of welfare navigate between the entitlements dispensed within a shrinking sphere of ‘ca...
This article explores the contingencies of financialisation and housing. More specifically, how the ...
The idea that households should be encouraged to invest in assets that accrue over the lifetime to b...
In context of ongoing transformations in housing markets and socioeconomic conditions, this book foc...
The link between housing and health is of increasing importance in the UK policy and practice contex...
This paper conceptualises housing wealth and welfare across the life course. Drawing from the empiri...
Housing markets have multiple interactions with the rest of the economy and these are surveyed in th...
The British social rented sector has been characterised as operating like a socialist 'command' syst...
Markets are mechanisms for distributing goods and services according to people's ability to pay. The...
Markets are mechanisms for distributing goods and services according to people's ability to pay. The...
Markets are mechanisms for distributing goods and services according to people's ability to pay. The...
Housing is widely regarded as playing an important role in the mediation and management of health in...
The theory and practice of social welfare has been radically redefined in every part of the develope...
The positive health effects of owner-occupation, compared to renting, are well documented. But home ...
Housing is widely regarded as playing an important role in the mediation and management of health in...
The politics of welfare navigate between the entitlements dispensed within a shrinking sphere of ‘ca...
This article explores the contingencies of financialisation and housing. More specifically, how the ...
The idea that households should be encouraged to invest in assets that accrue over the lifetime to b...
In context of ongoing transformations in housing markets and socioeconomic conditions, this book foc...
The link between housing and health is of increasing importance in the UK policy and practice contex...
This paper conceptualises housing wealth and welfare across the life course. Drawing from the empiri...
Housing markets have multiple interactions with the rest of the economy and these are surveyed in th...
The British social rented sector has been characterised as operating like a socialist 'command' syst...