ABSTRACT

Young People and Housing brings together new research exploring the economic, social, and cultural challenges that face young people in search of permanent housing. Featuring international case studies from Asia, Europe, and Australia, Young People and Housing is a collection of groundbreaking work from leading scholars in housing policy.

Younger generations across a wide range of societies face increasing difficulties in gaining access to housing. Housing occupies a pivotal position in the transition from parental dependence to adult independence. Delayed independence has significant implications for marriage and family formation, fertility, inter and intra generational tensions, social mobility and social inequalities.

The social and cultural dimensions are, of course, enormously varied with strong contrasts between Asian and Western societies in terms of intergenerational norms and practices in relation to housing. Nevertheless, younger households in China (including Hong Kong), Japan, the USA, Australasia and Europe face very similar challenges in the housing sphere. Moreover, concerns about the housing future for younger generations are gaining greater policy and popular prominence in many countries.

part I|88 pages

The family, demography and the transition to adulthood

chapter 2|23 pages

Balancing Autonomy, Status and Family in the Transition to Adulthood

Class and housing aspects of the Southern European model in Athens, 1987–2004

chapter 3|22 pages

The First Steps Into the Italian Housing System

Inequality between generational gaps and family intergenerational transfers

chapter 4|25 pages

The Housing Transitions of Young People in Australia

Change, continuity and challenge

part II|54 pages

Housing affordability and youth housing trajectories

part III|76 pages

Economic change and generational fractures

chapter 10|20 pages

Residential Trajectories of Young French People

The French generational gap

chapter 11|18 pages

Young People's Trajectories Through Irish Housing Booms and Busts

Headship, housing and labour market access among the under 30s since the late 1960s