In Sweden, as in many European countries, the involvement of for-profit and non-profit actors in complex welfare services such as housing services for persons living in homelessness has raised concerns regarding contradictory aims, quality control and a lack of insight into publicly financed services. This paper uses data from Statistics Sweden Business Register to explore how housing services for persons living in homelessness were expanded and changed from 2011 to 2018 as well as how they varied between different types of municipalities. The analysis explores how these factors relate to the number of persons who receive housing due to homelessness as well as the threshold for entry to local rental housing markets across Swedish municipali...
The majority of Sweden’s municipalities have for the last decade reported a housing shortage. This h...
The four Nordic countries, Denmark, Finland, Norway, and Sweden, have for many years carried out per...
While it is generally agreed that the state has'rolled back’from direct intervention...
The overarching aim of this dissertation is to explore and describe Swedish local authorities’ measu...
In recent decades, Sweden has seen extensive change in its housing policy, with emphasis shifting fr...
Sweden has seen a rise in homelessness alongside its strained housing market. References are increas...
Homelessness has increased substantially in Sweden in the last decade with an emphasis on structural...
Following the Swedish housing inequality, large groups are being excluded from the regular housing m...
The development and dissemination of Housing First programmes have been slow and without nationalin...
During 2022 the Swedish government announced a new strategy to combat homelessness. As the populatio...
The Swedish unitary housing regime entails that everybody should be included on the regular housing ...
The aim of this article is to critically review the Swedish Government’s Strategy against Homelessne...
Homelessness is a growing global problem. Homelessness produces and reinforces social exclusion. The...
The emergence of Housing First in Sweden is described and analysed in the light of the deregulation ...
Homelessness has increased substantially in Sweden in the last decade with an emphasis on structural...
The majority of Sweden’s municipalities have for the last decade reported a housing shortage. This h...
The four Nordic countries, Denmark, Finland, Norway, and Sweden, have for many years carried out per...
While it is generally agreed that the state has'rolled back’from direct intervention...
The overarching aim of this dissertation is to explore and describe Swedish local authorities’ measu...
In recent decades, Sweden has seen extensive change in its housing policy, with emphasis shifting fr...
Sweden has seen a rise in homelessness alongside its strained housing market. References are increas...
Homelessness has increased substantially in Sweden in the last decade with an emphasis on structural...
Following the Swedish housing inequality, large groups are being excluded from the regular housing m...
The development and dissemination of Housing First programmes have been slow and without nationalin...
During 2022 the Swedish government announced a new strategy to combat homelessness. As the populatio...
The Swedish unitary housing regime entails that everybody should be included on the regular housing ...
The aim of this article is to critically review the Swedish Government’s Strategy against Homelessne...
Homelessness is a growing global problem. Homelessness produces and reinforces social exclusion. The...
The emergence of Housing First in Sweden is described and analysed in the light of the deregulation ...
Homelessness has increased substantially in Sweden in the last decade with an emphasis on structural...
The majority of Sweden’s municipalities have for the last decade reported a housing shortage. This h...
The four Nordic countries, Denmark, Finland, Norway, and Sweden, have for many years carried out per...
While it is generally agreed that the state has'rolled back’from direct intervention...