Space per person is a fundamental measure of equity in an urban society. From small samples of the Montreal population over the years 1861-1901, we infer substantial improvement in the average dwelling space available per person, but an extreme and persistent inequity in the distribution among households. The housing market remained polarised in terms of class and cultural identity. As crowding diminished, urban density increased, and the problem of working-class housing became, increasingly, one of collective rather than individual space. Families, through networks of kinship and neighbouring, found new ways to exert some control over vital urban micro-spaces. In a continuous, demanding process of adjustment of households to dwellings, the...
By exploring the life spaces of a nineteenth-century Montreal neighbourhood, we discover the social ...
By exploring the life spaces of a nineteenth-century Montreal neighbourhood, we discover the social ...
By exploring the life spaces of a nineteenth-century Montreal neighbourhood, we discover the social ...
Space per person is a fundamental measure of equity in an urban society. From small samples of the M...
This article maps and measures several dimensions of residential segregation in Montreal in 1881, th...
The production of housing underwent significant change in Canada's metropolis during the nineteenth ...
Montreal has long been perceived as “a city of tenants” in a North-American world of owners. This pe...
Recent scholarship has improved our understanding of the increase in home ownership in Canada from t...
This paper traces the evolution of reform ideology in the housing sphere in the first half of the tw...
Les historiens n’ont pas reconnu l’importance du logement dans le Canada moderne. Nous ne disposons ...
Little is known about working-class home ownership in Canada. On this issue the neglected 1931 Censu...
Research on the forming of an area in Issy-les-Moulineaux from 1881 to the present day has helped in...
Research on the forming of an area in Issy-les-Moulineaux from 1881 to the present day has helped in...
By exploring the life spaces of a nineteenth-century Montreal neighbourhood, we discover the social ...
While most scholars generally focus on the failings of the post-WWI Federal-Provincial housing schem...
By exploring the life spaces of a nineteenth-century Montreal neighbourhood, we discover the social ...
By exploring the life spaces of a nineteenth-century Montreal neighbourhood, we discover the social ...
By exploring the life spaces of a nineteenth-century Montreal neighbourhood, we discover the social ...
Space per person is a fundamental measure of equity in an urban society. From small samples of the M...
This article maps and measures several dimensions of residential segregation in Montreal in 1881, th...
The production of housing underwent significant change in Canada's metropolis during the nineteenth ...
Montreal has long been perceived as “a city of tenants” in a North-American world of owners. This pe...
Recent scholarship has improved our understanding of the increase in home ownership in Canada from t...
This paper traces the evolution of reform ideology in the housing sphere in the first half of the tw...
Les historiens n’ont pas reconnu l’importance du logement dans le Canada moderne. Nous ne disposons ...
Little is known about working-class home ownership in Canada. On this issue the neglected 1931 Censu...
Research on the forming of an area in Issy-les-Moulineaux from 1881 to the present day has helped in...
Research on the forming of an area in Issy-les-Moulineaux from 1881 to the present day has helped in...
By exploring the life spaces of a nineteenth-century Montreal neighbourhood, we discover the social ...
While most scholars generally focus on the failings of the post-WWI Federal-Provincial housing schem...
By exploring the life spaces of a nineteenth-century Montreal neighbourhood, we discover the social ...
By exploring the life spaces of a nineteenth-century Montreal neighbourhood, we discover the social ...
By exploring the life spaces of a nineteenth-century Montreal neighbourhood, we discover the social ...