Academic literature on the topic 'Irish housing'

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Journal articles on the topic "Irish housing"

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Shinnick, Edward. "Measuring Irish housing quality." Journal of Economic Studies 24, no. 1/2 (February 1997): 95–119. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/01443589710156907.

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Koessl, Gerald. "Housing shock: the Irish housing crisis and how to solve it." Housing Studies 36, no. 7 (August 9, 2021): 1143–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/02673037.2021.1965511.

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O'Neill, Daniel, Louis Gunnigan, and Peter Clarke. "Evolution of the construction of Dublin City Council’s housing, with emphasis on wall construction." Structural Survey 33, no. 2 (May 11, 2015): 109–32. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/ss-09-2014-0034.

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Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to present information on the construction technology used to build Dublin City Council’s (DCC’s) housing stock, with an emphasis on wall construction. Design/methodology/approach – The methodology applied was a mix of literature review and archival research. The research was undertaken as part of PhD research exploring the energy upgrade of a housing stock. Findings – The research uncovered details of the construction technology used in the construction of DCC’s housing stock, especially wall construction. These details disprove perceptions and assumptions made on the evolution of construction technology in Dublin and Ireland. Research limitations/implications – The research is limited in that it primarily focused on the period between 1887 to the introduction of the 1991 Building Regulations. Further research is required on both DCC’s housing stock and the Irish housing stock to identify the specific changes in construction technology. Practical implications – It is hoped this research will be a foundation for further research on the evolution of house construction technology, and housing stock asset intelligence in Ireland. Originality/value – This research provides information for researchers and professionals with an interest in the evolution of Irish house construction technology. This is an area which has not received significant attention in Irish built-environment research.
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Cronin, David, and Kieran McQuinn. "House Prices and the Credit-Driven Household Demand Channel: The Case of the Irish Economy." Credit and Capital Markets – Kredit und Kapital 54, no. 2 (April 1, 2021): 199–221. http://dx.doi.org/10.3790/ccm.54.2.199.

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The performance of the Irish economy stands out across western economies over the past two decades as the later years of its “Celtic Tiger” phase gave way to a sharp and extremely large economic downturn between 2008 and 2012. This severe recession has been followed by a Lazarus-style economic recovery in recent years. This paper examines the role played by the credit-driven housing net worth channel in the path that Irish economic performance has taken between 2002 and 2019 by specific reference to developments in the domestic labour market. We find a significant positive relationship between housing net worth and employment growth in Ireland, manifesting itself through the non-traded sector of the economy between 2007 and 2012. This followed the emergence and then bursting of a substantial credit-fuelled housing market bubble in the Irish residential property market. Our analysis indicates no evident link between economic activity and a credit-driven housing net worth channel in recent years. This may reflect market and regulatory responses to the banking crisis-led recession of the late 2000s and early 2010s.
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MCMANUS, RUTH. "Tackling the urban housing problem in the Irish Free State, 1922–1940." Urban History 46, no. 1 (February 26, 2018): 62–81. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0963926818000214.

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ABSTRACT:At its inception, the Irish Free State faced an apparently intractable housing problem that required immediate action. This article examines the legislation enacted in the 1920s and 1930s, focusing on its impact on local authority housing in Ireland's provincial towns. Whereas the 1932 Housing Act has generally been heralded as the start of a concerted attack on the slums, this assertion is re-evaluated in the context of the debates of the 1920s. Following an overview of the national situation, a case-study of Ballina, Co. Mayo, explores the impacts of the housing drive. State-aided housing schemes made a significant contribution to the housing stock between 1923 and 1940. Although characterized by contemporary media as a triumph, however, the housing drive raised many issues including build quality, costs, opposition and social segregation. The article considers some of these challenges and raises a number of questions for future consideration.
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Smyth, Diarmaid Addison, and Kieran McQuinn. "Assessing the sustainable nature of housing-related taxation receipts: the case of Ireland." Journal of European Real Estate Research 9, no. 2 (August 1, 2016): 193–214. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/jerer-01-2016-0004.

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Purpose The Irish fiscal position was significantly affected by the recent financial crisis. Budgetary surpluses quickly gave way to significant deficits post 2007, culminating into a lengthy excessive deficit procedure and entry into a formal EU/IMF assistance programme in 2010. Much of the deterioration in the public finances was caused by a sharp decline in property-related taxes because the Irish housing market rapidly contracted. In this paper, the authors quantify the extent to which disequilibria in the housing market can affect the tax take, finding significant implications over an extended period. Design/methodology/approach The authors attempt to quantify the extent of housing-related tax windfall gains and losses in Ireland over a 30-year period as a result of disequilibrium in the housing market. This involves a three-step modelling approach where we relate property-dependent taxes to the housing market while estimating equilibrium in the latter before solving for the tax take consistent with that equilibrium. In so doing, the authors find that the fiscal position compatible with equilibrium in the housing market has at times diverged greatly from actual outturns. Findings This paper confirms the significant role played by the housing market in influencing both the tax-take and the overall fiscal position. The authors find that there have been a number of instances where excesses in the housing market have spilled over into fiscal aggregates, notably in the housing bubble period between 2003 and 2008. However, with the on-going adjustments in the housing market, it would appear that prices and volumes have overcorrected in recent years. Overall, much greater emphasis should be given to the role of the housing market in forecasting key taxation aggregates. Originality/value The recent crisis highlighted how domestic policy mistakes (both in terms of budgetary planning and financial market regulation) can greatly amplify economic shocks. Irish budgetary policy in the run up to the financial crisis of 2008/2009 was clearly based on unsustainable levels of housing-related tax receipts. This paper highlights the need for a much more granular approach in framing tax forecasts and in assessing the public finances by more explicitly factoring in housing market developments.
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Murphy, Mary P., and Rory Hearne. "Implementing marketisation: comparing Irish activation and social housing." Irish Political Studies 34, no. 3 (March 5, 2019): 444–63. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/07907184.2019.1583215.

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McIntyre, Anthony P. "Home Truths: Property TV, Financialization, and the Housing Crisis in Contemporary Ireland." Television & New Media 22, no. 1 (November 30, 2020): 65–82. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1527476420975755.

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This article examines how a specific form of lifestyle programming indexes both national concerns and transnational financial trends as well as diffuse social fissures in Irish life. Emerging in the late 1990s amid a construction boom, Irish property television adapted and thrived through the subsequent post-2008 crash, the concomitant implementation of austerity policies and an ensuing housing crisis. This boom-to-bust cycle was precipitated by the financialization of property within Ireland, a process whereby housing and commercial property became embedded in transnational financial market cycles. Through an analysis of three key examples of the genre, this article argues that for the most part, Irish property television seeks to hold at bay anxieties generated by a growing wealth and income disparity in the state. While this programming displays an ideological commitment to the “investor subjects” of home-ownership, increasingly the concerns of those excluded from this version of the good life are evident.
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Maye-Banbury, Angela, and Rionach Casey. "The sensuous secrets of shelter: How recollections of food stimulate Irish men’s reconstructions of their early formative residential experiences in Leicester, Sheffield and Manchester." Irish Journal of Sociology 24, no. 3 (July 24, 2016): 272–92. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0791603516659503.

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This paper examines the intersection between food, recollection and Irish migrants’ reconstructions of their housing pathways in the three English cities of Leicester (East Midlands), Sheffield (South Yorkshire) and Manchester (North). Previous studies have acknowledged more implicitly the role of memory in representing the Irish migrant experience in England. Here, we adopt a different stance. We explore the mnemonic power of food to encode, decode and recode Irish men’s reconstructions of their housing pathways in England when constructing and negotiating otherness. In doing so, we apply a ‘Proustian anthropological’ approach in framing the men’s representations of their formative residential experiences in the boarding houses of the three English cities during the 1950s and 1960s are examined. The extent to which food provided in the boarding houses was used as an instrument of discipline and control is examined. The relevance of food related acts of resistance, food insecurity and acts of hedonic meat-centric eating in constructing the men’s sociocultural identity are also explored.
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Stevenson, Simon, and James Young. "Forecasting Housing Supply: Empirical Evidence from the Irish Market." European Journal of Housing Policy 7, no. 1 (February 15, 2007): 1–17. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14616710601132518.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Irish housing"

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Bhreatnach, Aoife Eibhlin. "Becoming conspicuous : Irish travellers, society and the state, 1922-70." Thesis, De Montfort University, 2003. http://hdl.handle.net/2086/4913.

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This thesis gives an historical account of the official and popular reaction to Travellers in independent Ireland. It describes the people who travelled Irish roads, outlining how and why Travellers were distinguishable from settled people. This study shows that one consequence of the developments in state and society from 1922 onwards was the alienation and isolation of Travellers. The urban and rural working class experienced massive social change, often as a result of government policy. Travellers became socially and economically distinct from the general population because of changing attitudes to the family economy and selfemployment determined by legislation such as the School Attendance Act 1926. When the introduction of planning redefined public space, campsites came to be viewed as eyesores. Planning legislation also introduced the concept of an amenity, a landscape designed for popular and tourist consumption. This had considerable implications for Travellers' use of marginal land. Despite complaints from local representatives, successive governments refused to tackle the `itinerant problem'. Occasionally efforts were made to target Travellers for public health reasons or on the basis of problems caused by vagrancy and homelessness. However, the government believed that the legal implications for the whole population of anti-Traveller measures were not worth enduring. While Travellers evaded repressive measures, they were largely ignored in welfare provision. Social welfare was extended in an ad hoc, piecemeal manner, with Travellers as a group among the last in society whose entitlement to assistance was recognised. The publication of the Report of the Commission on Itinerancy in 1963 marked a shift in the relationship between Travellers and the state. The report recommended settlement and assimilation as the solution to widespread poverty among Travellers and the hostility felt by the settled community. How the settlement programme was organised and directed, its successes and failures are also analysed. Many Travellers were politicised by their experience in the settlement programme of the 1960s. The thesis concludes when Traveller representatives were included in organisations established to minister to their community.
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Fearon, Kyle. "Formal Institutions in Irish Planning: Europeanization Before and after the Celtic Tiger." Thesis, Blekinge Tekniska Högskola, Institutionen för fysisk planering, 2012. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:bth-13024.

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Many economies throughout the world were devastated by the global financial crisis of 2007-2008. Ireland in particular experienced a severe collapse in its housing market. Despite the progression of European-influenced planning policy that was meant to promote balanced regional development in Ireland, the country's housing market vastly overbuilt, exacerbating a housing market crash that ended the Celtic Tiger era. Drawing on Europeanization and historical institutionalism as theoretical frameworks, this thesis argues that the link between these EU-influenced policy principles and local Irish planning practice was weak during an important phase of Ireland's economic growth. This conclusion is demonstrated through the analysis of a case study, McEvoy and Smith v. Meath County Council. The findings show that while Ireland's national government created an ambitious National Spatial Strategy modeled on EU principles, non-binding Regional Planning Guidelines allowed local authorities to continue granting zoning changes and permissions. These decisions were therefore uninhibited by the constraints of population projections, consideration for infrastructure provision, and overall good planning practice. This research calls into question the effectiveness of transferring policy principles from the EU to Member States. It suggests more generally that to implement policy and law successfully, policy makers must appreciate the societal and economic context in which these rules will operate.
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Moose, Charles. "The Theory and Practice of Community Policing: An Evaluation of the Iris Court Demonstration Project." PDXScholar, 1993. https://pdxscholar.library.pdx.edu/open_access_etds/1331.

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This dissertation deals both with the theory and practice of community policing in the United States and elsewhere while focusing on a specific community policing project in Portland, Oregon. It discusses the history of police work in America, as well as that of the Portland Police Bureau. It also explicates the various meanings of "community policing," along with the problems and issues that have surfaced as the community policing movement has evolved. The research reported here was based on a project conducted by the Portland Police Bureau and numerous supporting agencies. The project was inaugurated in May 1990 with the following goals: improve quality of life of the residents, reduce the fear of crime, and reduce the levels of actual crime. Iris Court is a public housing complex owned and operated by the Housing Authority of Portland. It was recommended as a demonstration site for community policing because of past and ongoing problems of crime in and around it. The Portland City Council had mandated that community policing become the policing style in Portland, and the demonstration project was intended to test various community policing strategies. The tenants were surveyed prior to the implementation of the community policing strategies. The Metro-Life Enhancement Team was formed, an action plan was developed, most of the action plan items were implemented, and the tenants were resurveyed one year later. The evaluation of the project was conducted to assess whether community policing had a measurable effect on public safety. The dependent variables were quality of life, fear of crime, and actual crime. Various community policing strategies would be judged to have been successful if reported crime declined, the fear of crime was reduced, and the quality of life improved. The data show that the project was at least moderately successful. Reported crime declined, fear of crime was reduced, and there were indications that the quality of life was improved. The most striking finding was a 55% decrease in reported crime during the study period. This study suggests that community policing strategies of partnership, empowerment, problem solving, accountability, and service orientation can be successful.
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Books on the topic "Irish housing"

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1958-, Williams James, Economic and Social Research Institute., and Ireland. Department of the Environment, Heritage and Local Government., eds. Irish national survey of housing quality 2001-2002. Dublin: Economic and Social Research Institute, 2003.

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Brenan, Suzanne. A review of the implementation of Irish rural housing policy. Dublin: University College Dublin, 1998.

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Association, Teach Irish Housing. An Teach Irish Housing Association: a profile. London: An Teach IrishHousing Association, 1988.

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McQuinn, Kieran. A model of the Irish housing sector. Dublin: Central Bank and Financial Services Authority of Ireland, 2004.

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Conniffe, Denis. Irish house price indices: Methodological issues. Dublin: Economic and Social Research Institute, 1999.

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Downey, Dáithí. New realities in Irish housing: A study on housing affordability and the economy. Dublin: CRUBE, Dublin Institute of Technology, 1998.

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Brett, Charles Edward Bainbridge. Housing a divided community. Dublin, Ireland: Institute of Public Administration, Dublin in association with the Institute of Irish Studies, Queen's University of Belfast, 1986.

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Project, Cara Irish Homeless. The Housing position of young Irish people in London. London: Cara, 1987.

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Institute of Public Administration (Dublin, Ireland) and Queen's University of Belfast. Institute of Irish Studies., eds. Housing a divided community. Dublin: Institute of Public Administration in association with the Institute of Irish Studies, Queen's University of Belfast, 1986.

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Randall, Geoffrey. Over here: Young Irish migrants in London : education, training, employment, housing, health,anti-Irish racism. London: Action Group for Irish Youth, 1990.

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Book chapters on the topic "Irish housing"

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Pollard, Carole. "Housing indigenous industry." In Irish Housing Design 1950–1980, 18–36. New York : Routledge, 2020. |: Routledge, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315442402-2.

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Norris, Michelle, and Patrick Shiels. "Irish Housing in the European Context." In Housing Contemporary Ireland, 364–88. Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4020-5674-1_18.

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Boyd, Gary A., and Brian Ward. "Housing Mid-Century Irish Publics." In Housing and the City, 161–78. London: Routledge, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003245216-18.

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Stevenson, Simon. "The Dynamics of the Irish Housing Market." In Global Housing Markets, 101–33. Hoboken, NJ, USA: John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/9781119200505.ch5.

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Redmond, Declan, and 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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Boyd, Gary A., Michael Pike, and Brian Ward. "Introduction." In Irish Housing Design 1950–1980, 1–17. New York : Routledge, 2020. |: Routledge, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315442402-1.

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Murphy, Orla. "The expression of method." In Irish Housing Design 1950–1980, 211–33. New York : Routledge, 2020. |: Routledge, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315442402-10.

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Boyd, Gary A. "As easy as plugging in a fire." In Irish Housing Design 1950–1980, 37–62. New York : Routledge, 2020. |: Routledge, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315442402-3.

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Donovan, Kevin. "The high life." In Irish Housing Design 1950–1980, 63–89. New York : Routledge, 2020. |: Routledge, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315442402-4.

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Mhearáin, Aoibheann Ní, and Brian Ward. "The sharp edge of newness." In Irish Housing Design 1950–1980, 90–114. New York : Routledge, 2020. |: Routledge, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315442402-5.

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Conference papers on the topic "Irish housing"

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Maloco, J. B., and S. C. McLoone. "The Design and Implementation of a Wireless Mesh Sensor Network for a Housing Community." In IET Irish Signals and Systems Conference (ISSC 2012). Institution of Engineering and Technology, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1049/ic.2012.0180.

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Maloco, J., S. McLoone, and D. T. Delaney. "Using Rugby MSF broadcast for time division multiplexing synchronisation in a housing community sensor network." In IET Irish Signals and Systems Conference (ISSC 2006). IEE, 2006. http://dx.doi.org/10.1049/cp:20060452.

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"Regulating the Rented Residential Sector of the Housing Market, an Irish Solution to a Europe Wide Problem." In 2005 European Real Estate Society conference in association with the International Real Estate Society: ERES Conference 2005. ERES, 2005. http://dx.doi.org/10.15396/eres2005_162.

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Reports on the topic "Irish housing"

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Egan, Paul, Eoin Kenny, and Kieran McQuinn. Increasing future housing supply: What are the implications for the Irish economy? ESRI, February 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.26504/qec2022win_sa_egan.

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McGinnity, Frances, Ivan Privalko, Helen Russell, Sarah Curristan, Amy Stapleton, and James Laurence. Origin and Integration: Housing and Family among migrants in the 2016 Irish Census. ESRI, April 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.26504/bkmnext422.

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McQuinn, Kieran. With ‘g’ greater than ‘r’, should we be borrowing to increase Irish housing supply. ESRI, June 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.26504/qec2021sum_sa_mcquinn.

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