Published online: 06 Nov 2019Cold housing is not widely recognized as a problem that occurs in mild-climate countries like Australia. But emerging evidence suggests that it is an important, albeit under-acknowledged, problem that may contribute to high rates of ill health and mortality during the winter months. We bring together two historically important theoretical developments to better understand the social and economic distribution of cold housing. Drawing on nationally representative data from the Household, Income and Labour Dynamics in Australia survey between 2001 and 2016, we find that the characteristics of households unable to adequately heat their homes strongly reflects known patterns of inequality across, for example, tenure,...
Recent research documents the adverse causal impacts on health and productivity of extreme heat, whi...
In many places extreme heat causes more deaths than ?oods, cyclones and bush?res. However, efforts t...
Housing is a central component of productive, healthy, and meaningful lives, and a principle social ...
International evidence suggests that cold housing – and its effects on health – is not just confined...
Australia is considered by many to be a warm climate country and hence winter cold and its health ef...
There is a growing realisation among policy-makers and researchers that Australia has a vastly under...
Issues of fuel poverty and thermal discomfort have been identified in social housing internationally...
Objective: To investigate explanatory factors for persistent cold temperatures in homes which have r...
In England, the morbidity and mortality rate is substantially higher during winter months. In the wi...
Housing problems, such as affordability, poor quality of condition, or damp, are key determinants of...
Background: The ratio of winter to non-winter mortality rates, or excess winter mortality (EWM), is ...
Background: Living in cold housing conditions and risk of fuel poverty presents a range of physiolog...
Over the last decade, Australia has experienced ongoing housing affordability decline, and this has ...
House brokers typically intuit that any type of warmth causes people to buy houses more frequently. ...
In Australia the preference of most of the ageing population is to age in place. It is therefore nec...
Recent research documents the adverse causal impacts on health and productivity of extreme heat, whi...
In many places extreme heat causes more deaths than ?oods, cyclones and bush?res. However, efforts t...
Housing is a central component of productive, healthy, and meaningful lives, and a principle social ...
International evidence suggests that cold housing – and its effects on health – is not just confined...
Australia is considered by many to be a warm climate country and hence winter cold and its health ef...
There is a growing realisation among policy-makers and researchers that Australia has a vastly under...
Issues of fuel poverty and thermal discomfort have been identified in social housing internationally...
Objective: To investigate explanatory factors for persistent cold temperatures in homes which have r...
In England, the morbidity and mortality rate is substantially higher during winter months. In the wi...
Housing problems, such as affordability, poor quality of condition, or damp, are key determinants of...
Background: The ratio of winter to non-winter mortality rates, or excess winter mortality (EWM), is ...
Background: Living in cold housing conditions and risk of fuel poverty presents a range of physiolog...
Over the last decade, Australia has experienced ongoing housing affordability decline, and this has ...
House brokers typically intuit that any type of warmth causes people to buy houses more frequently. ...
In Australia the preference of most of the ageing population is to age in place. It is therefore nec...
Recent research documents the adverse causal impacts on health and productivity of extreme heat, whi...
In many places extreme heat causes more deaths than ?oods, cyclones and bush?res. However, efforts t...
Housing is a central component of productive, healthy, and meaningful lives, and a principle social ...