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1

Romanazzi, Grazia. "Giovani a bassa generatività: la transizione alla vita adulta tra crisi, paura e progettualità." EDUCATION SCIENCES AND SOCIETY, no. 2 (January 2020): 302–15. http://dx.doi.org/10.3280/ess2-2019oa8848.

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The author investigates the universe of the young people in the Italian context, starting from the political impediments which affect the job placement and, consequently, delay the acquisition of economic independence and housing autonomy, and considering the cultural conditions of a society that "holds" children in their maternal houses and inhibits their transition to adult life and the formation of their own family. The portrait of a community with a low birth rate emerges as an unequivocal sign of a personal and social crisis. But still in young people survives and persists a hidden desire for family which is a yearning for planning as an ontological category of human beings. Therefore, the hope and commitment at the same time are the definition of adult education pathways, focused on parenting, birth and care education.
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2

Ciampa, Francesca, Giorgio Croatto, Massimo Rossetti, Michele De Carli, Francesco Chinellato, Umberto Turrini, Angelo Bertolazzi, and Francesco Incelli. "Architectural technology responds to the environmental crisis: participatory design in an emergency context / La tecnologia dell’architettura risponde alla crisi ambientale: la progettazione partecipata in ambito emergenziale." Valori e Valutazioni 30 (August 2022): 119–34. http://dx.doi.org/10.48264/vvsiev-20223008.

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Within the framework of the research and innovation strategy RIS3 “Sustainable Living” (POR-FSE, funded by the Veneto Region), for the improvement of the resilience and adaptation capacity of the Veneto territory to environmental crises and emergencies, the subject of the contribution returns the results of the participatory experimentation of the project H.E.L.P. Veneto ‘ High-efficiency Emergency Living Prototypes Veneto - Sustainable adaptive residences for temporary stay in environmental emergencies. The research concerns the design of a minimum flexible emergency living module, replicable on a large scale, multifunctional, sustainable, powered by off-grid systems and integrated into the built environment. The housing unit uses timber, a material linked to the local building tradition, whose prefabricated modular reversibility follows principles of circular reuse. Moreover, the constructive adaptability of the interior spaces is reflected in a “liquid space” capable of transforming itself according to the needs of the occupants. The paper introduces a form of participatory design of the emergency housing module, based on the engagement of small and large companies, related to different segments of the construction market, a leading sector in the economy of Veneto. The participatory approach borrows from Architectural Technology the tools needed to understand the characteristics of the settlement system, the potential of the project and the value of scientific stakeholder engagement in the process. Using the Soft System Methodology, direct investigation protocols have been constructed relating to the performance of the living unit. Using Strategic Options Development and Analysis (SODA), the results of the experimented survey (large-scale questionnaires) were decoded, interpreted and systematised. The processing of the answers allowed the stakeholders to validate the potential of the proposed module and, at the same time, to be informed about its characteristics. The innovation of the method lies precisely in the modelling phase, which makes it possible to integrate the results of the hard and soft data analyses and to make it clear how participation plays an essential role in the process of designing and validating the proposed module. Nell’ambito della strategia di ricerca e innovazione RIS3 “Sustainable Living” (POR-FSE, finanziato dalla regione Veneto), per il miglioramento della capacità di resistenza e di adattamento del territorio veneto a crisi ed emergenze ambientali, l’oggetto del contributo restituisce gli esiti della sperimentazione partecipata del progetto H.E.L.P. Veneto High efficiency Emergency Living Proto- types Veneto – Residenze adattive sostenibili per la permanenza temporanea in regime di emergenza ambientale. La sperimentazione riguarda la progettazione di un modulo minimo abitativo di emergenza flessibile, repli- cabile a larga scala, polifunzionale, sostenibile con impianti a funzionamento off-grid e integrato nell’ambiente costruito. L’unità abitativa utilizza il legno, materiale legato alla tradizione costruttiva locale, la cui reversibilità modulare prefabbricata segue principi di riuso circolare. Inoltre, l’adattabilità costruttiva degli ambienti interni si riflette in uno “spazio liquido” capace di trasformarsi in base alle esigenze dell’abitare. Il contributo propone una forma di progettazione partecipata del modulo abitativo emergenziale, basata sull’engagement delle realtà aziendali di piccole e grandi dimensioni, relative ai diversi segmenti di mercato dell’edilizia, settore trainante della regione Veneto. L’approccio partecipativo mutua dalla Tecnologia dell’Architettura gli strumenti di conoscenza atti alla comprensione delle caratteristiche del sistema insediativo, delle potenzialità del progetto e del valore dell’engagement scientifico degli stakeholder nel processo. Utilizzando la Soft System Methodology sono stati costruiti dei protocolli di indagine diretta che combinano la conoscenza prestazionale dei processi insediativi nell’unità ambientale. Mediante la Strategic Options Development and Analysis (SODA) sono stati decodificati, interpretati e sistematizzati i risultati della survey sperimentata (questionari ad ampia scala). L’elaborazione delle risposte ha fatto sì che il sapere esperto degli stakeholder validasse le potenzialità del modulo proposto informandosi, al contempo, sulle caratteristiche dello stesso. L’innovazione del metodo risiede proprio nella fase di modellazione, la quale permette di integrare i risultati delle analisi dei dati hard e quelle dei dati soft, e di rendere chiaro come la partecipazione svolga un ruolo essenziale nel processo di animazione e validazione del modulo proposto.
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3

Romanazzi, Grazia. "(Dis)orientamento politico e precarietà lavorativa come fattori di rischio di esclusione sociale: i giovani italiani tra crisi e prospettive. Uno studio di caso." EDUCATION SCIENCES AND SOCIETY, no. 2 (January 2020): 61–73. http://dx.doi.org/10.3280/ess2-2019oa8469.

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The author investigates the "youth universe" in Italy; specifically, the hard relationship between it and politics and institutions, characterized by a lack of trust and credibility. The question of the absence of work makes the Italian case unique and exemplary: young people are precarious, inadequately paid. Unemployment, the late age to the first job and atypical contracts impoverish young people of the potential wealth they could carry around: innovation, change, planning, growth and future; all that exclude them from the country's decision-making processes. Thus, housing autonomy and economic independence are postponed, hence the transition to adulthood. Deprived of the fixed points that guided previous generations, today's young people do not recognize themselves into any ideology, do not feel represented by any political force. An investigation carried out close to the elections of March 4, 2018 confirmed what has been exposed so far and noted that the consequent discontent found a possibility of expression and change in the neophyte Movimento 5 Stelle. Therefore, it is appropriate to ask ourselves what are the motivations and conditions that have led young people, disappointed and disillusioned, to move away from "traditional politics". It is urgent to promote a cultural revolution to give young Italians the role of protagonists of present, backed by tradition but making space to the new and welcoming the future. Which role does the family play as the primary agency for political education? What proposal can make pedagogy of family educational relationships?
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4

De Abreu, Aline Cavalcanti. "CRISE DO CAPITAL E ORÇAMENTO PÚBLICO DA HABITAÇÃO SOCIAL NO BRASIL." Revista Políticas Públicas 20, no. 1 (July 21, 2016): 289. http://dx.doi.org/10.18764/2178-2865.v20n1p289-306.

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O presente estudo trata do financiamento da habitação social no Brasil no período de 2006 a 2012. Para isso, a metodologia envolveu a pesquisa teórica e do orçamento público da União. A institucionalização da política habitacional se desenvolveu num contexto de tomada do Estado como indutor de uma macroeconomia sob o ideário do social-liberalismo. Nessa perspectiva, ocorreu a reestruturação do mercado imobiliário e sob a crise econômica de 2008 a implementação de medidas anticíclicas para minimizá-la. Para a promoção da habitação social tivemos o Fundo Nacional de Habitação de Interesse Social orientado a satisfazer as necessidades habitacionais da população. Contudo, este foi paulatinamente desfinanciado e esvaziado de seu sentido político. Em 2009, foi criado o Programa Minha Casa Minha Vida com caráter de privilegiamento do produtor privado, o que possibilita a punção de fundo público e a redução da responsabilidade do Estado sob a habitação social como direito social. Palavras-chave: Crise do capital, Política de habitação social, Orçamento público.CAPITAL CRISIS AND PUBLIC SOCIAL HOUSING BUDGET IN BRAZIL Abstract: This study deals the financing of social housing in Brazil between the years 2006 to 2012. For this purpose, the methodology involved the theoretical research and the Union's public budget. The institutionalization of the housing policy developed in a context of state taken as inducer of macroeconomics under the social liberalism of ideas. From this perspective, it occurred the restructure of the housing market and under the economic crisis of 2008 measures were implemented to minimize it. For the promotion of social housing we had the National Funding for housing of social interesting oriented to meet the housing needs of the population. However, this was gradually non-funding and withdraw from its political sense. In 2009, it was created the Programa Minha Casa Minha Vida with character of the private producer privileging to continue taking in the public fund and the State’s to reduce under the politic of social housing as a social right. Key words: Capital Crisis, Social housing policy, Public budget.
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5

Trifu, Dr Alexandru. "Global Crisis and Housing Erection in Economies of Today." Indian Journal of Applied Research 3, no. 12 (October 1, 2011): 136–37. http://dx.doi.org/10.15373/2249555x/dec2013/37.

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6

Walters, Eddison. "Skyrocketing Home Prices and The Global Housing Crisis Today." Journal of Management and Training for Industries 9, no. 1 (April 1, 2022): 21–39. http://dx.doi.org/10.12792/jmti.9.1.21.

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7

Walters, Eddison. "Skyrocketing Home Prices and The Global Housing Crisis Today." Journal of Management and Training for Industries 9, no. 1 (April 1, 2022): 21–39. http://dx.doi.org/10.12792/jmti.9.1.21.

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8

Gawron, Henryk. "HOUSING MARKET IN CRISIS PERIOD - THE EXAMPLE OF POZNAN." JOURNAL OF INTERNATIONAL STUDIES 4, no. 1 (May 20, 2011): 33–43. http://dx.doi.org/10.14254/2071-8330.2011/4-1/4.

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9

Minton, Anna, Michela Pace, and Henrietta Williams. "The housing crisis." City 20, no. 2 (March 3, 2016): 256–70. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13604813.2016.1143687.

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10

Marvell, Alan. "Housing in crisis." Geography 92, no. 3 (November 1, 2007): 189–94. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00167487.2007.12094199.

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11

Jo Huth, Mary. "URBAN HOUSING CRISIS." International Journal of Sociology and Social Policy 8, no. 6 (June 1989): 81–91. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/eb013062.

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12

Lipman, Alan. "The housing crisis." Habitat International 12, no. 3 (January 1988): 200–201. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0197-3975(88)90078-1.

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13

Stott, Richard, and Elizabeth Blackmar. "Building a Housing Crisis." Reviews in American History 18, no. 2 (June 1990): 213. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/2702751.

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14

Robben, Pieter J. M., and Pieter A. van Stuijvenberg. "India's Urban Housing Crisis." Third World Planning Review 8, no. 4 (November 1986): 335. http://dx.doi.org/10.3828/twpr.8.4.l6307jhj4q2g0283.

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15

Goodman, Laurie S. "Dimensioning the Housing Crisis." Financial Analysts Journal 66, no. 3 (May 2010): 26–37. http://dx.doi.org/10.2469/faj.v66.n3.6.

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16

Goodman, Laurie S. "Dimensioning the Housing Crisis." CFA Digest 40, no. 2 (May 2010): 2. http://dx.doi.org/10.2469/dig.v40.n2.25.

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17

Carr, Helen, Dave Cowan, and Caroline Hunter. "Policing the housing crisis." Critical Social Policy 27, no. 1 (February 2007): 100–127. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0261018307072209.

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18

Yates, Judith. "Australia's Housing Affordability Crisis." Australian Economic Review 41, no. 2 (June 2008): 200–214. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-8462.2008.00502.x.

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19

Светник, Тамара. "Adjusting housing construction strategies under the housing crisis." Известия Иркутской государственной экономической академии 25, no. 6 (2015): 941–46. http://dx.doi.org/10.17150/1993-3541.2015.25(6).941-946.

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20

Park, JungHo, and Dowell Myers. "Depressed Housing Access Amid Crisis of Housing Shortage." Journal of Korea Real Estate Analysists Association 27, no. 4 (December 31, 2021): 120. http://dx.doi.org/10.19172/kreaa.27.4.7.

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21

HANKINSON, MICHAEL. "When Do Renters Behave Like Homeowners? High Rent, Price Anxiety, and NIMBYism." American Political Science Review 112, no. 3 (March 9, 2018): 473–93. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0003055418000035.

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How does spatial scale affect support for public policy? Does supporting housing citywide but “Not In My Back Yard” (NIMBY) help explain why housing has become increasingly difficult to build in once-affordable cities? I use two original surveys to measure how support for new housing varies between the city scale and neighborhood scale. Together, an exit poll of 1,660 voters during the 2015 San Francisco election and a national survey of over 3,000 respondents provide the first experimental measurements of NIMBYism. While homeowners are sensitive to housing’s proximity, renters typically do not express NIMBYism. However, in high-rent cities, renters demonstrate NIMBYism on par with homeowners, despite continuing to support large increases in the housing supply citywide. These scale-dependent preferences not only help explain the deepening affordability crisis, but show how institutions can undersupply even widely supported public goods. When preferences are scale dependent, the scale of decision-making matters.
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22

Rozo, Sandra V., and Micaela Sviatschi. "Is a refugee crisis a housing crisis? Only if housing supply is unresponsive." Journal of Development Economics 148 (January 2021): 102563. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jdeveco.2020.102563.

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23

Robertson, Mary. "The great British housing crisis." Capital & Class 41, no. 2 (December 2, 2016): 195–215. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0309816816678571.

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Noting the recent resurgence of housing as a political issue, this article takes a historic view of the origins of the current housing crisis. While the foundations of the contemporary housing system were laid in the period following the First World War, the roots of the crisis lie in two developments in the 1980s: the privatisation of the social housing stock through the Right to Buy and the growth of mortgage lending in response to financial liberalisation. These two changes combined to produce an upsurge in ground rent on residential land and a restructuring of housing consumption and production around the pursuit of this ground rent. This article ends by outlining a range of policy measures and considering the prospects for their implementation.
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24

Waeyenberge, Elisa Van. "Crisis? What crisis? A critical appraisal of World Bank housing policy in the wake of the global financial crisis." Environment and Planning A: Economy and Space 50, no. 2 (December 9, 2017): 288–309. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0308518x17745873.

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This paper critically assesses international policy advocacy on how to resolve massive shelter needs in the developing world. It does so by focusing on the World Bank as a leader in development. It argues that the Bank’s housing policy remains thoroughly limited by its persistent commitment to neoliberal and financialised policy practices. These put housing finance at the centre of attempts to relieve shelter needs in the developing world despite the dramatic failures of such an approach as laid bare through the global financial crisis. The paper takes a historical approach to examine the trajectory of World Bank housing policy and is based on close scrutiny of a combination of quantitative and qualitative data. It concludes that an urgent need persists for a decoupling of finance from housing in international policy advocacy.
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POWER, ANNE. "THE CRISIS IN COUNCIL HOUSING-IS PUBLIC HOUSING MANAGEABLE?" Political Quarterly 58, no. 3 (July 1987): 283–95. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-923x.1987.tb00743.x.

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26

Edwards, Michael. "The housing crisis and London." City 20, no. 2 (March 3, 2016): 222–37. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13604813.2016.1145947.

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27

Stafford, D. C. "Book Review: The Housing Crisis." Journal of Interdisciplinary Economics 1, no. 3 (April 1986): 211. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/02601079x8600100313.

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28

Schwartz, Alex. "Lessons from the Housing Crisis." Family and Consumer Sciences Research Journal 40, no. 1 (September 2011): 3–14. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1552-3934.2011.02084.x.

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29

Crook, Tony. "Housing and the financial crisis." Housing Studies 31, no. 3 (February 19, 2016): 358–59. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/02673037.2015.1135611.

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30

Drew, Rachel Bogardus. "Housing and the Financial Crisis." Eastern Economic Journal 44, no. 1 (January 2018): 172–73. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/eej.2014.71.

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31

Chemillier, Pierre. "Facing the Urban housing crisis." Batiment International, Building Research and Practice 16, no. 2 (January 1988): 99–103. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/01823328808726874.

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32

Heslop, Julia. "Housing crisis: building a Protohome." Architectural Research Quarterly 20, no. 4 (December 2016): 381–82. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1359135517000100.

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33

Rohe, William M. "Tackling the Housing Affordability Crisis." Housing Policy Debate 27, no. 3 (April 11, 2017): 490–94. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10511482.2017.1298214.

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34

Morris, Alan, Andrew Beer, John Martin, Sandy Horne, Catherine Davis, Trevor Budge, and Chris Paris. "Australian local governments and affordable housing: Challenges and possibilities." Economic and Labour Relations Review 31, no. 1 (October 8, 2019): 14–33. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1035304619880135.

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For an increasing proportion of Australian households, the Australian dream of home ownership is no longer an option. Neoliberal housing policy and the financialisation of housing has resulted in a housing affordability crisis. Historically, Australian housing policy has afforded only a limited role to local government. This article analyses the results of a nation-wide survey of Australian local governments’ perceptions of housing affordability in their local government area, the possibilities for their meaningful intervention, the challenges they face, the role of councillors and councils’ perceptions of what levels of government should take responsibility for housing. Almost all of the respondents from Sydney and Melbourne councils were clear that there is a housing affordability crisis in their local government area. We apply a framework analysing housing policy in the context of neoliberalism and the related financialisation of housing in order to analyse the housing affordability crisis in Sydney and Melbourne. We conclude that in order to begin resolving the housing crisis in Australia’s two largest cities there has to be an increasing role for local government, a substantial increase in the building of social and affordable housing and a rollback of policies that encourage residential property speculation. JEL Codes: R31, R21
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35

ZHANG, Beibei. "Why Is Japan’s Housing Vacancy Rate So High? A History of Postwar Housing Policy." Social Science Japan Journal 23, no. 1 (December 23, 2019): 65–77. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ssjj/jyz041.

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Abstract This article provides an explanation for Japan’s current vacant housing crisis. While existing explanations usually ascribe the crisis to demographic factors or individual governmental policies, this article seeks to transcend those explanations by situating the vacant housing phenomenon within a broader social, economic, and historical context. Drawing on historical materials, the empirical analysis deciphers how the state has subordinated housing development to the overarching objective of economic growth through the manipulation of housing finance policies and land use planning regulations during the postwar period. The article argues that today’s vacant housing crisis is the result of the state’s pro-growth housing policies throughout the postwar period.
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Rodriguez-Torrent, Juan Carlos, and Emiliano Nicolás Gissi-Barbieri. "Crisis sociopolítica, pandemia y vivienda precaria: ¿Arraigo haitiano en Santiago de Chile? (2019-2021)." Revista Urbano 25, no. 45 (May 31, 2022): 20–29. http://dx.doi.org/10.22320/07183607.2022.25.45.02.

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The logic of the so-called “social distancing” has highlighted the vulnerability of immigrants, especially those of Haitian origin. Facing this, through qualitative methodology, the relationship between the measures decreed in the face of the pandemic, a political-social crisis that precedes it, informal labor, and precarious housing, is explored, since these points are key to understanding the formation of a unique habitat, ties, and the building of a “territorialized us”, which provides answers to how the health crisis is lived, and how the project of life and social insertion in Chile, particularly in Santiago, is redefined. This is a young population with difficulties to exercise the right to the city within the principles of democracy, equality, and social justice, being cast as second class due to daily and institutional racism. These conditions have effects on the migrant route, their intentions to settle, and the tendency to return to their countries of origin.
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Ejiogu, Amanze, Mercy Denedo, and Stewart Smyth. "Special issue on Accounting for housing, housing crisis and pandemic." Critical Perspectives on Accounting 70 (July 2020): 102205. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cpa.2020.102205.

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38

Wetzstein, Steffen. "The global urban housing affordability crisis." Urban Studies 54, no. 14 (July 12, 2017): 3159–77. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0042098017711649.

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This critical commentary confronts and explores the – so far under-recognised and under-researched – emergent global crisis of urban housing affordability and affordable housing provision. This crisis results from the fact that housing-related household expenses are rising faster than salary and wage increases in many urban centres around the world; a situation triggered by at least three global post-Global Financial Crisis megatrends of accelerated (re)urbanisation of capital and people, the provision of cheap credit and the rise of intra-society inequality. Reflecting on the recent findings of extensive comparative ethnographic research across Western countries, and analytically approaching housing affordability and affordable housing issues from a broadly understood intersection of political and economic spheres (e.g. issues of state and market, governance and regulation, policy and investment), the paper pursues four key objectives: raising awareness of the crisis, showing its extent and context-specificity but also the severe social as well as problematic spatial implications, linking current developments to key academic debates in housing studies and urban studies, and importantly, developing a research agenda that can help to redress the currently detectable ‘policy–outcome’ gap in policy making by asking fresh and urgent questions from empirical, theoretical and political viewpoints. This intervention ultimately calls for more dedicated and politicised knowledge production towards achieving affordable urban futures for all.
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Barari, Mahua, and Srikanta Kundu. "The Role of the Federal Reserve in the U.S. Housing Crisis: A VAR Analysis with Endogenous Structural Breaks." Journal of Risk and Financial Management 12, no. 3 (July 23, 2019): 125. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/jrfm12030125.

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This paper reexamines the role of the Federal Reserve in triggering the recent housing crisis. Specifically, we explore if the relationship between the federal funds rate and the housing variables underwent structural changes in the wake of the housing crisis. Using quarterly data spanning 1960–2017, we estimate a VAR model involving federal funds rate, real GDP growth and a housing variable (captured by house price inflation or residential investment share or housing starts) and conduct time series analysis for the pre- and post-crisis periods. While previous studies mostly set break-dates based on events known a priori to split the full sample to subsamples, we endogenously determine structural break points occurring at multiple unknown dates. Our Granger causality analysis indicates that the federal funds rate did not cause house price inflation, although it caused residential investment share and housing starts in the pre-crisis period. In the post-crisis period, the real GDP growth caused residential investment and housing starts while house price inflation had a momentum of its own. Our impulse response and forecast error variance decomposition analysis reinforce these results. Overall, our findings suggest that housing volume fluctuates more than house prices over the business cycle.
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Carvalho, Ana Paula Soares. "Poderes locais, habitação, espaços públicos e acolhimento dos que vêm de fora." Êxodos e Migrações 4, no. 6 (December 19, 2019): 125–37. http://dx.doi.org/10.24168/revistaprumo.v4i6.1184.

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The concentration of financial, administrative and cientific activities in a few cities led to the build-up of opportunities in places with specific characteristics, which became attraction hubs for people all over the world. Its common in these places supply crisis in the affordable dwelling market. Not obstantly, the ones more hardly affected by this crisis are immigrants and refugees. Access to jobs is also another crucial issue for this population, specially those without work permission. This essay aims to reflect on this process and explore the possibilities that local governments could provide for life conditions that are more adequate for habitants that live in this specific situation of exclusion.
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41

Tiwari, Aviral Kumar, Rangan Gupta, Juncal Cunado, and Xin Sheng. "Testing the white noise hypothesis in high-frequency housing returns of the United States." Economics and Business Letters 9, no. 3 (December 8, 2020): 178–88. http://dx.doi.org/10.17811/ebl.9.3.2020.178-188.

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Utilizing a daily dataset of aggregate housing market returns of the United States, we test whether housing market returns are white noise using the blockwise wild bootstrap in a rolling-window framework. We investigate the dynamic evolution of housing market efficiency and find that the white noise hypothesis is accepted in most windows associated with non-crisis periods. However, for some periods before the burst of the housing market bubbles, and during the subprime mortgage crisis, European sovereign debt crisis and the Brexit, the white noise hypothesis is rejected, indicating that the housing market is inefficient in periods of turbulence. Our results have important implications for economic agents.
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42

Sokolov, Yu I. "Systemic Crisis of Housing and Communal Services in Russia." Issues of Risk Analysis 17, no. 5 (October 30, 2020): 10–25. http://dx.doi.org/10.32686/1812-5220-2020-17-5-10-25.

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The article discusses issues related to the systemic crisis of housing and communal services in Russia, the course of housing and utilities reform, the state of fixed assets of housing and communal services,
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43

McCreanor, Tim, Frances Hancock, and Nicola Short. "The Mounting Crisis at Ihumaatao." Counterfutures 6 (December 1, 2018): 139. http://dx.doi.org/10.26686/cf.v6i0.6386.

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A recent Environment Court decision adds to more than 150 years of Court, Crown, and Council decision-making that alienates mana whenua from land they occupied for centuries and now puts Ihumaatao, a rare cultural heritage landscape near Auckland International Airport, at risk of permanent destruction. This latest Court decision gives transnational corporation Fletcher Building Limited, the current ‘landowners’, the green light to progress its inappropriately sited, low-density, high-cost housing development at Ihumaatao. Fletcher plans to build 480 dwellings on 32 hectares, using the fast-track, developer-friendly provisions of the Housing Accords and Special Housing Areas Act 2013 (HASHA Act) to sideline mana whenua and community interests, as well as diminishing protections for our cultural and natural heritage.
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44

Dominguez-Martinez, Pilar. "Dation In Payment Of The Mortgaged Homestead." Review of Business Information Systems (RBIS) 15, no. 5 (September 28, 2011): 101–4. http://dx.doi.org/10.19030/rbis.v15i5.6026.

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The indebtedness of Spanish households coupled with a marital crisis, requires finding solutions to combine the protection of family interests, mainly of children, housing needs of society and the satisfaction of the creditor's right to credit mortgage crisis when the family faces the mortgage payment that affects the family housing. Also, new laws on regional express recognition of the custody and control of the destiny of the family housing in cases of divorce and separation through formulas such as the sale of the house, let consider the use of dation in payment of the family housing as a way to avoid foreclosure in cases of marital crisis in the context of current economic crisis.
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45

Tsai, I.-Chun, and Che-Chun Lin. "International Real Estate Review." International Real Estate Review 22, no. 1 (March 31, 2019): 27–58. http://dx.doi.org/10.53383/100274.

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This paper uses the house price indices of 20 metropolitan statistical areas (MSAs) across the United States from January 1991 to April 2018 to analyze the dynamic connectedness of the housing markets in these MSAs. By estimating the connectedness of the entire sample before, during, and after the subprime mortgage crisis, this paper compares the changes in the impact of each regional housing market in the abovementioned MSAs during the stated time period. The results show that housing markets in west coast MSAs are the most influential, and the spatial distribution of this influence is affected by the subprime mortgage crisis because, compared to other periods, the fewest MSAs have a positive net impact during the crisis period and are found along the coast. The influence of the west coast cities increases after the subprime mortgage crisis compared to that before the crisis, probably because the house prices in these cities recover more quickly. In addition, an increase in connectedness represents more systematic risks and also influences the connectedness of the housing markets with other financial markets. The results of this paper also indicate that if the Federal Reserve uses monetary policies to interfere with the housing market, this might increase the default risks of the entire housing market across the United States, and a financial crisis from the spread of default risks might ensue. By discussing the linkage of the regional housing markets across the United States, we provide another warning indicator for the risks of housing markets, risks linked to other financial markets, and uncertainty risks for the overall economy.
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46

Gallent, Nick, Dan Durrant, and Neil May. "Housing supply, investment demand and money creation: A comment on the drivers of London’s housing crisis." Urban Studies 54, no. 10 (May 9, 2017): 2204–16. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0042098017705828.

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This commentary examines the current emphasis on supply-side solutions to the housing crisis in England – building more homes to increase accessibility – against a backdrop of intensifying demand-side pressures, the financialisation of housing, and the impact of credit liberalisation and money creation on housing demand and prices. It reflects on the need to balance additional housing supply, where needed, with gradual ‘demand management’ responses that at last acknowledge the centrality of spatially unbounded investment demand and the flow of money created by deregulated banks into housing as fundamental to the current crisis of housing affordability and access.
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47

Dewilde, Caroline, and Lindsay B. Flynn. "Post-crisis developments in young adults’ housing wealth." Journal of European Social Policy 31, no. 5 (December 2021): 580–96. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/09589287211040443.

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How has housing wealth inequality changed for young-adult households in the post-financial crisis period, and what is driving such change? We chart a path for subsequent studies by analysing the previously unexamined post-crisis housing wealth profile of young adults via different angles and using multiple inequality measures. Using household micro-data for 11 European countries ( Household Finance and Consumption Survey, 2010–2017) and the United States ( Survey of Consumer Finances, 2010–2016), we find that the accumulation of housing assets for 22–44 year olds is unevenly concentrated among high-income homeowners, over and above what would be expected given the well-known decline in homeownership. We describe and assess several potential drivers for these wealth profile changes, finding that the current explanations offered in the literature do not adequately account for the unequal wealth profile of young people. We conclude that a mix of dynamics, including housing market volatility, housing market configurations leading to uneven capital gains and losses, and the increased social selectivity of homeownership intersect to shape the ways that young adults navigate the housing market in post-crisis times.
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48

Wills, Jacob. "Building urban power from housing crisis." City 20, no. 2 (March 3, 2016): 292–96. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13604813.2016.1143688.

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49

Watt, Paul, and Anna Minton. "London's housing crisis and its activisms." City 20, no. 2 (March 3, 2016): 204–21. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13604813.2016.1151707.

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50

Heller, J. Roderick. "The Crisis in Low-Income Housing." Journal of Negro Education 58, no. 3 (1989): 281. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/2295661.

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