Auswahl der wissenschaftlichen Literatur zum Thema „Housing in Ireland“

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Zeitschriftenartikel zum Thema "Housing in Ireland"

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Minogue, Patrick J. „Housing at Clonmel, Ireland“. Batiment International, Building Research and Practice 15, Nr. 1-6 (Januar 1987): 210–14. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/09613218708726818.

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Murtagh, Brendan. „Integrated Social Housing in Northern Ireland“. Housing Studies 16, Nr. 6 (November 2001): 771–89. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/02673030120090539.

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Aalen, F. H. A. „Public housing in Ireland, 1880–1921“. Planning Perspectives 2, Nr. 2 (Mai 1987): 175–93. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/02665438708725638.

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Baker, Francine. „Housing and planning regulation – England and Ireland“. International Journal of Law in the Built Environment 5, Nr. 2 (05.07.2013): 118–36. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/ijlbe-08-2012-0015.

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Paris, Chris. „Housing and the Migration Turnaround in Ireland“. Urban Policy and Research 23, Nr. 3 (September 2005): 287–304. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/08111470500197839.

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Vang, Zoua M. „Housing Supply and Residential Segregation in Ireland“. Urban Studies 47, Nr. 14 (08.06.2010): 2983–3012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0042098009360220.

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Healy, Tom, und Paul Goldrick-Kelly. „Ireland’s housing crisis – The case for a European cost rental model“. Administration 66, Nr. 2 (01.05.2018): 33–57. http://dx.doi.org/10.2478/admin-2018-0017.

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AbstractLack of access to affordable quality homes constitutes a significant crisis for workers, families and communities in the Republic of Ireland. Current government plans appear to be insufficient to make a significant impact. Pressure on individuals and families is a direct consequence of under - investment over many years, as well as a failure on the part of a market-led and property-developer-led model of housing to deliver enough dwellings to meet the needs of a growing population. The optimum solution, we propose, is the establishment of The Housing Company of Ireland, which will draw on long-term borrowing combined with an equity injection from the Ireland Strategic Investment Fund, and will undertake or commission, on a commercial basis, a programme of planning, building, acquiring and renting of new homes. This investment will supplement and further strengthen work by the local authorities and the voluntary housing associations in the area of social housing.
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Hayden, Aideen, Paddy Gray, Ursula McAnulty und Bob Jordan. „The Private Rented Sectors in the North and South of Ireland: A Case Study in Convergence Analysis“. Journal of Economic Development, Environment and People 4, Nr. 3 (30.09.2015): 45. http://dx.doi.org/10.26458/jedep.v4i3.117.

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The theme of this paper centres on the convergence and divergence of housing policy between two regimes inhabiting the same geographical space on the island of Ireland, as reflected in the development of the private rented sector (PRS) in both jurisdictions. Using a historical comparative analysis of key indicators, this paper aims not just to present an accurate picture of the state of policy towards the sector in both jurisdictions today, but to place this analysis within a framework which looks at the backdrop of overall housing systems. The paper postulates that while Northern Ireland and the South of Ireland are reflective of the Anglo Saxon tradition in housing, major historical differences in their pathways have brought clearly identifiable policy outcomes indicative of their differing status in comparative welfare analysis. While both jurisdictions have diverged significantly during the course of the twentieth century in the profile of policy and housing tenure mix, showing examples of path dependency at work, there is clear evidence of more recent convergence. More recent changes in housing policy in both jurisdictions away from direct social housing provision and the changing role of the private rented sector are also examined and a convergence theory is proposed.
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Serpa, Regina. „Immigration and housing in the Republic of Ireland“. Housing Studies 32, Nr. 1 (05.10.2016): 118–19. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/02673037.2016.1240403.

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Murtagh, Brendan. „Planning for Anywhere: Housing Policy in Northern Ireland“. Housing Studies 13, Nr. 6 (November 1998): 833–39. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/02673039883100.

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Dissertationen zum Thema "Housing in Ireland"

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Singleton, Dale Allen. „Housing policy and practice in the divided community of Northern Ireland : an evaluation with particular reference to the Northern Ireland Housing Executive“. Thesis, Queen's University Belfast, 1993. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.286778.

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Mackay, Christopher John. „Large housing organisations : a comparative study of the Hong Kong Housing Authority and the Northern Ireland Housing Executive“. Thesis, University of Ulster, 1997. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.390163.

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Connaughton, Mark. „Between a Rock and a Hard Place : Navigating the Housing Pathways of Newcomers in Ireland“. Thesis, Malmö universitet, Institutionen för Urbana Studier (US), 2021. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:mau:diva-44367.

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This thesis presents research into the housing pathways of newcomers in Ireland who receive status to remain in the country and come through the Irish direct provision reception system. In the global context of financialisation of housing and local context of state reliance on the private market to provide housing to all sections of society, cities in Ireland are experiencing severe housing crises like many other cities across the globe, characterised by shortage, increasing rents and persistent homelessness rates. Meanwhile, in response to increased migration and heightened border anxieties, Ireland has sought to deter forced migrants, in this case with dispersed and unattractive direct provision reception centres. What happens then to newcomers with status to remain in Ireland, an already particularly vulnerable group in the housing system, when they have to enter this system in crisis after year-long stays in dispersed reception centres? This thesis addresses this question, looking at the specific effects of the Irish housing regime, with its unique local and recognisable global characteristics, and Irish reception policy, with its particular direct provision system, on newcomers’ search for housing. For context, the historical development and current features of the Irish housing regime, as well as migration and reception policy are traced and outlined. The thesis then tracks previous literature from international and Irish settings that deals with the issue of housing for newcomers in the Global North, including the historical development of the field and its current trends. The research design makes use of a cross-sectional, mixed-method approach to achieve its objectives. Using a constructionist housing pathways framework of analysis, accompanied by important concepts from thinkers such as Lefebvre, Agamben and Bengtsson & Borevi, the research draws on a mixture of surveys and follow-up interviews to examine the constraints, structures, strategies and outcomes of households when they have been granted status to remain in Ireland and must leave reception centres and find their own housing. The research identifies identity and power as two crucial factors in the navigation of housing pathways for newcomers and shows the detrimental effect of the retreat of the state from housing provision and reliance on marketised social housing provision on the right to housing for this group. Finally, the thesis recommends potential future studies and the policy implications of the research, in light of the difficulties of finding housing through the HAP scheme reported in this research, urge caution for proposed further reliance on marketised social housing provision for newcomers.
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Moore, Stephen Christopher. „The development of working class housing in Ireland 1840-1912 : a study of housing conditions, built form and policy“. Thesis, University of Ulster, 1986. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.253990.

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Fraser, Murray. „John Bull's other homes : state housing and British policy in Ireland, 1883-1922 /“. Liverpool (GB) : Liverpool university press, 1996. http://catalogue.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/cb38943605z.

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Sterrett, Kenneth Walter. „The sociology of design and aesthetics : the case of housing in rural Northern Ireland“. Thesis, Queen's University Belfast, 1999. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.394883.

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Cooke, Edward. „Making relationships of power visible in the Northern Ireland Housing Association audit : a governmentality critique“. Thesis, Queen's University Belfast, 2016. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.705892.

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This thesis considers the auditing of housing associations within Northern Ireland. The auditing of housing associations in Northern Ireland is a complex process within which a multiplicity of different relationships of power exists. Besides being complex, I argue that the Department of Social Development (DSD) audit process is not a transparent process. The lack of transparency is not helped because, generally, government departments tend to speak with rhetoric. This thesis suggests that the DSD audit process should be made visible and that housing associations should have the confidence to speak with parrésia. Analysing technologies of power and their normalising effects within the voluntary housing sector, I consider, subject inactions and reactions to the audit’s normalising processes. The ability (or inability) of low-level actors to counter-conduct, speak with parrésia, and engage with bottom-up surveillance technologies are considered as responses to the DSD’s normalisation processes. After examining the technologies of power utilised by the DSD and the technologies of resistance available to subjects to counter-conduct, I suggest how subject information and individual knowledge can be improved. Care-of-the-self (soul) as originally considered by Socrates and thereafter by Michel Foucault is explored within this thesis. The courage to speak fearlessly to the Master (in this case the DSD Audit team) is explored by examining a series of individual housing association audit reports. Acquisition of knowledge helps emancipate low-level actors. Within this thesis I examine how various bottom-up surveillance technologies (e.g. the Freedom of Information Act) can impact upon the triangular relationship that exists between knowledge, truth and the subject. The technologies and relationships of power that exist within the NI voluntary housing sector are considered within the context of Socratic examination, ethical parrésia, knowledge acquisition and the formation of one’s individual truth; in order to set free Master and Servant alike.
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Shanks, Kirk B. P. „The optimal deployment of energy efficient envelope technologies within the Northern Ireland Housing Executive existing stock“. Thesis, University of Ulster, 2001. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.390608.

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Watts, E. E. „The impact of legal rights to housing for homeless people : a normative comparison of Scotland and Ireland“. Thesis, University of York, 2013. http://etheses.whiterose.ac.uk/4315/.

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Taking as its starting point persistent debates about the appropriate balance between rights and discretion in the design and delivery of welfare policies, this thesis seeks to illuminate the contribution ‘rights-based approaches’ can make in responding to homelessness. It aims to bring conceptual clarity and empirical evidence to bear on the growing European and wider international focus on ‘rights-based approaches to homelessness’. Integrating classic debates in moral philosophy regarding the nature and status of rights with contemporary ideas about rights in social policy, the thesis distinguishes between various understandings of ‘rights’. Whereas deontological perspectives see rights as moral statements about human beings, consequentialist perspectives direct attention to the efficacy of legal or ‘black letter’ rights as a policy tool for achieving better outcomes for those in housing need. Focusing on legal rights to housing for homeless households, the thesis asks whether policy approaches founded on such rights deliver what we expect them to in practice. Specifically, it considers the impact of rights-based compared with non-rights based approaches, across four dimensions: meeting housing needs; juridification; minimising the stigma of homelessness; and empowering homeless households. A qualitative comparative study of homelessness policy in Scotland and Ireland forms the empirical core of the thesis. Scotland has attracted international recognition, having developed a strong legal safety net for homeless households, which in effect gives the vast majority of homeless households an individually enforceable legal right to settled housing. In Ireland, homelessness policy has also become a focal point for reform, but a rights-based approach has been rejected in favour of a ‘social partnership’ model, relying on a ‘problem solving approach’ among key stakeholders to build consensus and ‘ratchet up’ standards. The study involved interviews with key national stakeholders in both jurisdictions, and two local case studies in Edinburgh and Dublin, through which the perspectives and experiences of service providers, key local stakeholders and single homeless men were explored. The findings of the study add empirical weight to the current orthodoxy that rights-based approaches offer progressive solutions to the needs of homeless households. The research points to two key mechanisms through which legal rights help secure positive outcomes for single homeless men. First, legal rights minimise provider discretion, ensuring a focus on meeting the needs of homeless single men and crowing out competing policy objectives. A wider set of goals – including considerations of desert, ‘housing readiness’, social mix and community reactions – influence service provision in Dublin. This led to inertia in the Irish system, stemming flow through temporary accommodation. The comparative success of the Scottish approach in meeting the needs of homeless people, however, has implications for the capacity of other (non-homeless) groups in housing need to access social housing. It is argued, based on the empirical findings of the research, and within a normative framework of value pluralism and ‘tragic-realism’, that the Scottish approach strikes a ‘less worse’ balance between competing objectives than Ireland’s social partnership approach. Support for the Scottish model remains closely tied, however, to the capacity of the statutory system to not entirely crowd out the needs of other non-homeless households. Scotland’s approach remains vulnerable to the criticism that it sharpens perverse incentives for people to manufacture homelessness in order to gain priority in the allocation of social housing. Such a perverse incentive is, however, inherent to any approach to homelessness that prioritises homeless people in social housing allocations, and is present - albeit substantially dulled - in Ireland. This ‘moral hazard’ then, needs to be understood in the context of the choice stakeholders face between homelessness policies that prioritise need and create moral hazard, and approaches that do neither. Legal rights-based approaches also help secure better outcomes for homeless men through a second mechanism, namely their psycho-social impacts and their effect on discourses on homelessness. The framework of legal rights in Scotland helps construct those who are homeless as ‘entitled rights-holders’, supporting structural understandings of the causes of homelessness. In Ireland, homeless men were instead cast as ‘grateful supplicants’ and explanations of homelessness tended to emphasize personal responsibility and individual pathology. On this basis, it is argued that legal rights both minimise stigma and ‘empower’ homeless people, encouraging a more demanding and assertive set of attitudes, dispositions and expectations among homeless men that help maintain standards of service. According to this analysis, the capacity of legal rights to secure better outcomes does not rely primarily on the pursuit of legal challenges, but on the more subtle impacts of a rights-based policy framework. Integrating the key normative and empirical findings of the research, the thesis concludes by making three substantive ethical arguments concerning the design of homelessness policy. First, it is argued that in the case of homelessness, legitimate considerations about desert and deservingness in the allocation of social resources ought to be suspended. This argument rests on the empirical insight that Ireland’s ‘desert-sensitive’ approach appears to foster a set of dispositions among homeless men that stifle their progress out of homelessness, and on a normative perspective that seeks to suspend desert in the allocation of social goods that are deemed to be necessities for a ‘well-lived life’. Second, and by extension, it is argued that discretion in the delivery of homelessness policies ought to be minimised. In Ireland, providers’ over-riding discretion - and resulting attempt to balance various objectives, including ‘desert-sensitivity’ - places substantial hurdles in the path of homeless men seeking to access settled housing. The boundaries legal rights cast around provider discretion ‘empower’ homeless men in their interactions with providers, helping maintain a more purely needs-focused response to homelessness. Third and finally, it is argued that homelessness policies that bolster a sense of entitlement among those who are homeless – and recognition among others that this sense of entitlement is legitimate - are desirable. Such a sense of entitlement appears to form part of a wider ‘virtuous circle’ achieved by Scotland’s rights-based approach, which helps maintain pressure for – and achieve - positive outcomes for homeless men.
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Lyons, Ronan C. „The economics of Ireland's property market bubble“. Thesis, University of Oxford, 2013. http://ora.ox.ac.uk/objects/uuid:c8b7f52f-af24-45be-a2a4-b57ed9ebc26d.

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This doctorate explores key aspects of the economics of housing by examining Ireland's housing market bubble of the early 2000s. For earlier chapters, the main source material is a previously unused dataset of almost two million property listings, covering the entire country from 2006 until 2012, maintained by property website daft.ie. An initial chapter outlines stylised facts of Ireland's housing market 2007-2012, including a greater spread of prices over property size in the crash but a narrower spread of rents. In contrast, the geographical spread of prices and rents was largely unchanged. The spread of rents was constrained relative to the spread of prices, suggesting either renter search thresholds or buyer "lock-in" effects. To examine which was at work, the daft.ie dataset is combined with information on a range of amenities, including landscape, transport, education, social capital and market depth. Overall, there is clear evidence that the rent effects of a range of amenities are smaller than the price effects. There is limited evidence of procyclical amenity pricing, which would indicate "lock-in" effects, with the analysis suggesting instead countercyclical pricing, or "property ladder" effects during the bubble. Results from these analyses are based on listed price and rents, rather than transaction prices. The relationship between the two is examined in a separate chapter, using an additional Central Bank of Ireland dataset on mortgages. The spread between list and sale prices gap that exists between the two is decomposed into four parts, a selection spread, a matching spread, a counteroffer spread and a drawdown spread. A selection spread of up to 10% emerged in the Irish housing market after 2009, while the counteroffer spread was positive before 2009 but negative for much of the period 2009-2011. The final chapter uses both inverted-demand and price-rent ratio methods to examine the long-run determinants of house prices in Ireland from 1980 on. In addition to careful treatment of standard fundamentals, it includes a measure of credit conditions as well as the ratio of persons to households, both contributions to the literature. The resulting inverted demand error-correction model shows a clear and stable long-run relationship, which is largely preserved when cointegration between series is explored. Similarly, a model of the price-rent ratio from 2000 shows clear error-correction properties. Together, they suggest that while a range of factors drove Irish house prices 1995-2001, credit conditions were largely responsible for the subsequent increase.
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Bücher zum Thema "Housing in Ireland"

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Norris, Michelle, und Declan Redmond, Hrsg. Housing Contemporary Ireland. Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4020-5674-1.

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Office, Ireland Central Statistics, und Ireland Central Statistics Office. Construction and housing in Ireland. Dublin: Stationery Office, 2006.

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Fahey, Tony. Social housing need in Ireland. Denver, CO: iAcademic Books, 2001.

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National Economic and Social Council. Housing in Ireland: Performance and policy. Dublin: National Economic and Social Council, 2004.

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National Council for the Aged (Ireland). Housing of the elderly in Ireland. Dublin: National Council for the Aged, 1985.

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Branch, Northern Ireland Department for Social Development Statisticss and Research. Northern Ireland housing statistcs 2002-03. Belfast: Department for Social Development, 2001.

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Housing law and policy in Ireland. Dublin: Clarus Press, 2006.

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Brian, Nolan, und Maitre Bertrand, Hrsg. Housing, poverty and wealth in Ireland. Dublin: Institute of Public Administration, 2004.

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Northern Ireland Housing Executive. Housing and Planning Division. Housing condition survey, 1987: Northern Ireland. Belfast: Northern Ireland Housing Executive, Housing & Planning Division c1988., 1988.

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Northern Ireland. Department of Social Development. Statistics and Research Branch. Northern Ireland housing statistics 2003-04. Belfast: Satistics and Research Branch, Department of Social Development, 2004.

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Buchteile zum Thema "Housing in Ireland"

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Norris, Michelle. „Social Housing“. In Housing Contemporary Ireland, 160–82. Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4020-5674-1_8.

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Redmond, Declan, und Michelle Norris. „Setting the Scene: Transformations in Irish Housing“. In Housing Contemporary Ireland, 1–20. Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4020-5674-1_1.

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Brooke, Simon, und Vanda Clayton. „The Changing Nature of the Housing Association Sector“. In Housing Contemporary Ireland, 205–23. Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4020-5674-1_10.

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Fitzgerald, Eithne, und Nessa Winston. „Housing, Equality and Inequality“. In Housing Contemporary Ireland, 224–44. Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4020-5674-1_11.

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O'Sullivan, Eoin. „Homelessness“. In Housing Contemporary Ireland, 245–67. Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4020-5674-1_12.

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Silke, David. „Accommodating the Traveller Community“. In Housing Contemporary Ireland, 268–88. Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4020-5674-1_13.

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Bannon, Michael. „Spatial Planning Frameworks and Housing“. In Housing Contemporary Ireland, 289–309. Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4020-5674-1_14.

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Redmond, Declan, Brendan Williams und Michael Punch. „Planning and Sustainability: Metropolitan Planning, Housing and Land Policy“. In Housing Contemporary Ireland, 310–28. Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4020-5674-1_15.

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O'Connell, Derry. „Urban Design and Residential Environments“. In Housing Contemporary Ireland, 329–43. Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4020-5674-1_16.

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Scott, Mark. „Rural Housing: Politics, Public Policy and Planning“. In Housing Contemporary Ireland, 344–63. Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4020-5674-1_17.

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Konferenzberichte zum Thema "Housing in Ireland"

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Magill, I. C. „Database mining in the Northern Ireland Housing Executive“. In IEE Colloquium on Knowledge Discovery in Databases. IEE, 1995. http://dx.doi.org/10.1049/ic:19950128.

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Compton, K., und M. Keaveney. „Impacts on One-off Housing Arising from Amended Building Control Regulations in Ireland“. In The 5th International Virtual Scientific Conference. Publishing Society, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.18638/ictic.2016.5.1.290.

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Barton, K., J. Bonsall und H. Gimson. „The Role of Archaeological Geophysics in Development–Led Housing, Road and Tourism Projects in Ireland“. In 69th EAGE Conference and Exhibition incorporating SPE EUROPEC 2007. European Association of Geoscientists & Engineers, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.3997/2214-4609.201401803.

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Maloco, J., und S. McLoone. „A suitable MAC protocol for transmit-only sensor nodes in a housing community wireless network“. In China-Ireland International Conference on Information and Communications Technologies (CIICT 2007). IEE, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.1049/cp:20070743.

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„New Kid on the Block?: Measuring the Cointegration of house prices in the Northern Ireland Housing Market.“ In 21st Annual European Real Estate Society Conference. ERES, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.15396/eres2014_189.

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Baxter, AJ, EJ Tweed, SV Katekireddi und H. Thomson. „RF25 Effects of housing first approaches on health and wellbeing of adults who are homeless or at risk of homelessness: systematic review and meta-analysis of randomised controlled trials“. In Society for Social Medicine and Population Health and International Epidemiology Association European Congress Annual Scientific Meeting 2019, Hosted by the Society for Social Medicine & Population Health and International Epidemiology Association (IEA), School of Public Health, University College Cork, Cork, Ireland, 4–6 September 2019. BMJ Publishing Group Ltd, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/jech-2019-ssmabstracts.140.

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Berichte der Organisationen zum Thema "Housing in Ireland"

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Russell, Helen, Ivan Privalko, Frances McGinnity und Shannen Enright. Monitoring adequate housing in Ireland. ESRI, September 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.26504/bkmnext413.

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Grotti, Raffaele, Helen Russell, Éamonn Fahey und Bertrand Bertrand Maître. Discrimination and inequality in housing in Ireland. ESRI, Juni 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.26504/bkmnext361.

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Allen-Coughlan, Matthew, Conor Judge, Conor O'Toole und Rachel Slaymaker. A county-level perspective on housing affordability in Ireland. ESRI, November 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.26504/rn20190402.

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Maître, Bertrand, Ivan Privalko und Dorothy Watson. Social Transfers and Deprivation in Ireland: A study of cash and non-cash payments tied to housing, childcare, and primary health care services. ESRI, November 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.26504/bkmnext401.

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A new ESRI study commissioned by the Department of Social Protection found that tied cash and non-cash transfers are associated with lower deprivation, especially among vulnerable families. The authors considered benefits tied to housing, childcare, and medical services using 2017 data.
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Orr, Joanna, Siobhan Scarlett, Orna Donoghue und Christine McGarrigle. Housing conditions of Ireland’s older population: Implications for physical and mental health. The Irish Longitudinal Study on Ageing, Oktober 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.38018/tildare.2016-02.

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