Housing Disadvantaged People?

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A01=Jane Ball
Allocation Commissions
Author_Jane Ball
Category=JBFD
Category=JKS
comparative housing systems
Conseil Constitutionnel
Contributory Social Security
council housing
Disadvantaged Outsiders
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eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
EU Competition
EU Competition Law346
EU Competition Policy
EU Internal Market
French housing
French law
French legislation
French Social Housing
Hauts De Seine
HLM Organization
Housing Benefi
Housing Disadvantaged People
housing protests
housing the poor
Insider Outsider Theory
Large Families
legal rights to accommodation
local authority housing allocation France
PLS.
Private Rented
Reduce Vat Rate
riots
social housing
Social Housing Allocation
Social Housing Applicants
Social Landlords
Social Mix
Social Rents
Social Tenants
spatial segregation analysis
tenant selection bias
urban exclusion
welfare state policy

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415554442
  • Weight: 830g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 29 Sep 2011
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Social housing appears to offer a solution for the housing of poor and disadvantaged people. The French "right to housing" offers poor and disadvantaged citizens priority in social housing allocation, and even a legal action against the State to obtain a social home. Despite this, France is suffering a long-lasting housing crisis with disadvantaged people having particular difficulties of access, often despite the efforts of local housing actors. This situation is affected by the European Court of Human Rights and EU decisions limiting diverse national housing and rental policies.

Between historic French revolutions and the modern riots, negotiated solutions to social dilemmas emerged. Despite progress in constitutional principles, complex local negotiations still ultimately determine who is housed. Local social landlords, mayors and employee and tenant representatives use their privileges to house their insiders: existing tenants, locals and employees, with rent insufficiently subsidized. ‘Insider Outsider’ theory is used for an economic analysis of exclusion in social housing allocation: its processes, institutional context, and stigmatizing effects. This highlights the spatial effects of nimbyism, excluding disadvantaged outsiders, and concentrating them in deprived areas. Simultaneously, urban regeneration reduced affordable housing stock and ‘social mix’ became a reason to refuse a social home.

History, comparative law, economic theory and local interviews with housing actors give a detailed picture of what happens in and around French social housing allocation for an interdisciplinary housing policy audience. Constitutional principles appear in an unfamiliar guise as negotiating positions, with the "right to property" supporting landlords and the "right to housing" supporting tenants. French debates about the function of social landlords are echoed across Europe and reflected in European policies concerning rights, and the exclusion of disadvantaged minorities.

Jane Ball is a senior lecturer at Newcastle University where she teaches several law courses concerning the organization of people on land. After 14 years in English legal practice she spent another 14 years researching the French housing scene, using an applied mix of public and private law, economic theory and empirical study.

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