Families, Housing and Property Wealth in a Neoliberal World

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The twenty-first century has so far been characterized by ongoing realignments in the organization of the economy around housing and real estate. Markets have boomed and bust and boomed again with residential property increasingly a focus of wealth accumulation practices. While analyses have largely focussed on global flows of capital and large institutions, families have served as critical actors. Housing properties are family goods that shape how members interact, organise themselves, and deal with the vicissitudes of everyday economic life. Families have, moreover, increasingly mobilized around their homes as assets, aligning household transitions and practices towards the accumulation of property wealth. The capacities of different families to realise this, however, are highly uneven with housing conditions becoming increasingly central to growing inequalities and processes of social stratification. This book addresses changing relationships between families and their homes over the latest period of neo-liberalization. The book confronts how transformations in households, life-course transitions, kinship and intergenerational relations shape, and are being shaped by, the shifting role of property markets in social and economic processes. The chapters explore this in terms of different aspects of home, family life and socioeconomic change across varied national contexts.

Author(s): Richard Ronald, Rowan Arundel
Series: Explorations in Housing Studies
Publisher: Routledge
Year: 2022

Language: English
Pages: 206
City: New York

Cover
Half Title
Series Page
Title Page
Copyright Page
Table of Contents
List of Illustrations
List of Contributors
Acknowledgements
Preface
1. Why Families, Housing and Property Wealth?
2. Welfare States, Housing Markets and Millennials: Inhibited Transitions into Adulthood
3. Housing and Intergenerational Relations: Family Support and the Mixed Economy of Housing in the UK
4. Families and the Reproduction of Homeownership in a Post-Socialist Context
5. Families and Housing Precarity in ‘Post-Crisis’ Ireland
6. Families, Housing and Economic Security
7. Family Debts and Intergenerational Giving: Supporting Transitions to Homeownership in Europe
8. Foreign Real Estate Investment and International Education as a Family Wealth Strategy
9. Epilogue: Family Houses and Housing Families
Index