This contribution is a reflection on the critical analysis of Mark Stephens of the theoretical work on housing systems by Jim Kemeny. It concludes that the analysis of Stephens is a great incentive to continue the debate on housing and welfare started by Kemeny. The core of the review is that Stephens focusses on the so-called maturation of social rental housing as a replacement of government subsidies: can non-profit housing compete with commercial housing under smart conditions for social sustainability? Stephens is right that this maturation thesis does not hold and he provides convincing evidence for this. However, Stephens contribution neglects an important part of Kemeny’s work: the link between housing and more in particular the role...
This thesis examines the interaction between housing policy and the social security benefits that su...
© 2014, © 2014 IBF, The Institute for Housing and Urban Research. Abstract: This short article is a ...
This article critiques Kemeny’s theory of housing regimes to explain housing systems change. Power b...
Housing studies is a broad field, which has ploughed the disciplines of political economy, radical g...
The drawbacks of the welfare regimes approach mean that a more holistic framework is needed for comp...
Jim Kemeny has made a major contribution to housing studies over a long period. Foremost has been hi...
This paper discusses the relation between typologies of welfare states and housing systems. An analy...
This paper discusses the relation between typologies of welfare states and housing systems. An analy...
In context of ongoing transformations in housing markets and socioeconomic conditions, this book foc...
For some time housing has been an object of government and governance. It is not surprising therefor...
Over recent decades, the management and delivery of housing assistance measures in many developed ec...
Social research on housing has grown rapidly during the last decade or so. Indeed, the need for soci...
This article develops a conceptual framework derived from welfare regime and concomitant literatures...
Both growth and unevenness in the distribution of housing wealth have become characteristic of advan...
Jim Kemeny in 1992 criticized existing housing research for neglecting social theory and being overl...
This thesis examines the interaction between housing policy and the social security benefits that su...
© 2014, © 2014 IBF, The Institute for Housing and Urban Research. Abstract: This short article is a ...
This article critiques Kemeny’s theory of housing regimes to explain housing systems change. Power b...
Housing studies is a broad field, which has ploughed the disciplines of political economy, radical g...
The drawbacks of the welfare regimes approach mean that a more holistic framework is needed for comp...
Jim Kemeny has made a major contribution to housing studies over a long period. Foremost has been hi...
This paper discusses the relation between typologies of welfare states and housing systems. An analy...
This paper discusses the relation between typologies of welfare states and housing systems. An analy...
In context of ongoing transformations in housing markets and socioeconomic conditions, this book foc...
For some time housing has been an object of government and governance. It is not surprising therefor...
Over recent decades, the management and delivery of housing assistance measures in many developed ec...
Social research on housing has grown rapidly during the last decade or so. Indeed, the need for soci...
This article develops a conceptual framework derived from welfare regime and concomitant literatures...
Both growth and unevenness in the distribution of housing wealth have become characteristic of advan...
Jim Kemeny in 1992 criticized existing housing research for neglecting social theory and being overl...
This thesis examines the interaction between housing policy and the social security benefits that su...
© 2014, © 2014 IBF, The Institute for Housing and Urban Research. Abstract: This short article is a ...
This article critiques Kemeny’s theory of housing regimes to explain housing systems change. Power b...