1st Edition

European Integration and Housing Policy

Edited By Mark Kleinman, Walter Matznetter, Mark Stephens Copyright 1998
    320 Pages
    by Routledge

    320 Pages
    by Routledge

    This book presents a series of debates arising from the housing needs of different EU countries. The authors address key issues by examining in turn:
    * the consequences of European integration for different housing markets * the impact of the Maastricht Treaty and other policy documents * the social consequences of integration including income distribution, homelessness and marginal housing estates
    * current housing policy in the Nordic countries and in Eastern Europe.

    1: Introduction; 1: Markets; 2: Are Housing Finance Systems Converging Within the European Union?; 3: Housing Investment in Europe; 4: Uncertainty in European Housing Markets; 5: The Impact of European Integration on the Construction Industry; 2: Policies; 6: Fiscal Restraint and Housing Policies Under Economic and Monetary Union; 7: Planning, Housing and the European Union; 8: The Control and Promotion of Quality in New Housing Design; 3: Outcomes; 9: Housing, Tenure and International Comparisons of Income Distribution; 10: Paying for Owner-Occupied Housing; 11: Homelessness in the European Union; 12: Marginal Housing Estates in Europe; 13: Western European Housing Policies; 4: Diversity in the European Union; 14: The Nordic Countries; 15: European Integration and the East-Central European ‘Outsiders' 1

    Biography

    Mark Kleinman is Senior Lecturer in Social Policy at the London School of Economics. Walter Matznetter is Assistant Professor at the Department of Geography of the University of Vienna and Mark Stephens is Lecturer at the Centre for Housing Research and Urban Studies, University of Glasgow

    'This is an excellent contribution to the knowledge of housing in Europe and its likely evolution in the near future. It has many strengths and will be an important source for researchers interested in comparative housing studies. And I do think that the 15 chapters are a great contribution in answering the two main research questions considered by the editors. It is a book to be recommended to both academics and practitioners concerned with housing policy and practice in Europe.' - Tesq Vol 91, 2000

    'Valuable not only as a 'book about Europe', but as an aid to placing national examples into a wider cross-national and EU-wide setting.' - Housing Studies