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Exploring Dual Housing Tenure Status as a Household Response to Demographic, Social and Economic Change

Kath Hulse and Ailsa Mcpherson

Housing Studies, 2014, vol. 29, issue 8, 1028-1044

Abstract: This article proposes that single housing tenure categories do not enable an understanding of the ways in which households use, occupy and own residential properties in the context of broad demographic, economic and social changes. Adapting work on sub-tenure housing choice, housing tenure is overlaid with ownership of residential property to develop four tenure types: Owner, Owner-Owner, Renter and Renter-Owner. Applying this typology in the Australian case provides valuable new insights, with 1.5 million households having dual housing tenure status, including almost one in eight private renters. More broadly, reconceptualising housing tenure to include ownership of other residential property can contribute to theoretical debates about household income and wealth; social status and identity; and social practices and life planning, potentially generating new research questions such as the extent to which Renter-Owners reflect new patterns of living or a response to affordability constraints, and the social identity and political affiliations of those with a dual tenure status.

Date: 2014
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Citations: View citations in EconPapers (5)

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DOI: 10.1080/02673037.2014.925097

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