International Journal of Housing Policy
2010 - 2025
Continuation of European Journal of Housing Policy. Current editor(s): Professor Suzanne Fitzpatrick, Gerard van Bortel and Richard Ronald From Taylor & Francis Journals Bibliographic data for series maintained by Chris Longhurst (). Access Statistics for this journal.
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Volume 23, issue 4, 2023
- Rent controls - a timeless and controversial intervention pp. 661-670

- Michael Voigtländer and Christine Whitehead
- Do rent controls and other tenancy regulations affect new construction? Some answers from long-run historical evidence pp. 671-691

- Konstantin A. Kholodilin and Sebastian Kohl
- Supply side effects of the Berlin rent freeze pp. 692-711

- Pekka Sagner and Michael Voigtländer
- Exploring rent pressure zones: Ireland’s recent rent control regime pp. 712-733

- Conor O’Toole
- Rent regulation: unpacking the debates pp. 734-757

- Alex Marsh, Kenneth Gibb and Adriana Mihaela Soaita
- Private rented market in Spain: can regulation solve the problem? pp. 758-782

- Montserrat Pareja-Eastaway and Teresa Sánchez-Martínez
- Reluctant regulators? Rent regulation in Australia during the COVID-19 pandemic pp. 783-803

- Chris Martin, Alistair Sisson and Sian Thompson
- Affordability of social housing for youth in greater Taipei: justice for whom? pp. 804-816

- Chantalle Elisabeth Rietdijk
- Dwelling justice: locating settler relations in research and activism on stolen land pp. 817-835

- Libby Porter and David Kelly
- Housing becomes a family affair pp. 836-839

- Rory Coulter
- Centring the family in housing studies: wealth transfer and property ownership, for some pp. 839-842

- Nancy Worth
- Housing families and families in housing pp. 842-846

- Laura James
- What about families, housing and property wealth in a neoliberal world? pp. 847-854

- Richard Ronald and Rowan Arundel
Volume 23, issue 3, 2023
- Exception as a government strategy: contemporary Chile’s housing policy pp. 437-463

- Xenia Fuster-Farfán
- Class differences in homeownership and mortgage debt burden across cohorts: the Israeli case pp. 464-500

- Or Cohen Raviv
- Manufactured home estates as retirement living in Australia, identifying the key drivers pp. 501-522

- Lois C. Towart and Kristian Ruming
- Making and unmaking home in the COVID-19 pandemic: a qualitative research study of the experience of private rental tenants in Ireland pp. 523-542

- Michael Byrne and Juliana Sassi
- An examination of perceptions and preferences for tiny house villages for the homeless in Missouri pp. 543-564

- Krista Evans
- Magnet mobility myths: exploring geographical mobility amongst people experiencing, or at-risk of, homelessness in Australia pp. 565-587

- Deb Batterham
- Reconceptualising housing emptiness beyond vacancy and abandonment pp. 588-611

- Sara Caramaschi and Francesco Chiodelli
- Big houses on a small island: legislating Singapore’s ‘good class’ bungalows pp. 612-628

- Edward S. W. Ti
- Continuity and change: wartime housing politics in Ukraine pp. 629-652

- Galyna Sukhomud and Vita Shnaider
- Social housing. Wellbeing and welfare pp. 653-656

- Tom Simcock
- What Town Planners Do: Exploring Planning Practices and the Public Interest Through Workplace Ethnographies pp. 656-659

- Jenny Wood
Volume 23, issue 2, 2023
- Housing and health: a time for action pp. 197-200

- Emma Baker and Rebecca Bentley
- A systematic review of the relationship between publicly subsidised housing, depression, and anxiety among low-Income households pp. 201-231

- Imad Dweik and Julia Woodhall-Melnik
- Dangerous liaisons? Applying the social harm perspective to the social inequality, housing and health trifecta during the Covid-19 pandemic pp. 232-259

- Craig M. Gurney
- ‘Trapped’, ‘anxious’ and ‘traumatised’: COVID-19 intensified the impact of housing inequality on Australians’ mental health pp. 260-291

- Marlee Bower, Caitlin Buckle, Emily Rugel, Amarina Donohoe-Bales, Laura McGrath, Kevin Gournay, Emma Barrett, Peter Phibbs and Maree Teesson
- Exploring the well-being of renters during the COVID-19 pandemic pp. 292-312

- David Oswald, Trivess Moore and Emma Baker
- Housing inequalities and resilience: the lived experience of COVID-19 pp. 313-337

- Ralph Horne, Nicola Willand, Louise Dorignon and Bhavna Middha
- Mapping the riskscape of using privately-owned short-term lets for specialist family violence crisis accommodation pp. 338-361

- Erika Martino and Rebecca Bentley
- Assessing the impact of funding cuts to local housing services on drug and alcohol related mortality: a longitudinal study using area-level data in England pp. 362-380

- Alexandros Alexiou, Kate Mason, Katie Fahy, David Taylor-Robinson and Benjamin Barr
- Inter-sectoral policy partnerships: a case study of South Western Sydney’s Health and Housing Partnership pp. 381-402

- Karla Jaques, Fiona Haigh, Siggi Zapart, Maria Beer, Genene Peisley, Cesar Calalang, Mark Thornell, Stephen Conaty and Patrick Harris
- Accessing adequate housing for older Black women in Toronto: a document review of housing related government strategies and action plans pp. 403-416

- Nicoda Foster, Lydia Kapiriri, Michel Grignon and Kwame McKenzie
- The lived experiences and temporality of estate regeneration pp. 417-420

- John Flint
- Dissembling and displacing: the legacy of estate regeneration pp. 421-423

- Edward G. Goetz
- Structures of power and inequality pp. 424-428

- Keith Jacobs
- Estate regeneration and its discontents: a response to reviewers pp. 429-435

- Paul Watt
Volume 23, issue 1, 2023
- Using genre to understand healthy housing provisions pp. 1-23

- Liam Grealy
- Mortgage regulation as a quick fix for the financial crisis: standardised lending and risky borrowing in Canada and the Netherlands pp. 24-46

- Dolly Loomans and Maria Kaika
- Working from home: negotiations of domestic functionality and aesthetics pp. 47-69

- Brittany Goodwin, Nicholas Webber, Tom Baker and Ann E. Bartos
- The place of care in social housing in a neoliberal era pp. 70-91

- Marie-Eve Desroches and Blake Poland
- Home improvements in later life: competing policy goals and the practices of older Dutch homeowners pp. 92-112

- Oana Druta, Frans Schilder and Christian Lennartz
- The role of private landlords in making a rented house a home pp. 113-137

- Steve Rolfe, Kim McKee, Julie Feather, Tom Simcock and Jennifer Hoolachan
- Forced housing mobility and mental wellbeing: evidence from Australia pp. 138-162

- Rachel Ong ViforJ, Jack Hewton, Sherry Bawa and Ranjodh Singh
- Hacking housing: theorising housing from the minor pp. 163-178

- Sophia Maalsen
- Social housing systems and welfare in Ireland and Portugal: a comparative analysis pp. 179-189

- Valesca Lima and Romana Xerez
- Show me the bodies: how We let Grenfell happen pp. 190-195

- Khadijah Na’eem
Volume 22, issue 4, 2022
- Urban housing in India pp. 467-473

- Urmi Sengupta, Annapurna Shaw and Debolina Kundu
- Financial constraints to adequate housing: an empirical analysis of housing consumption disequilibrium and household decisions on meeting housing requirements in India pp. 474-499

- Piyush Tiwari, Jyoti Shukla and Raghu Dharmapuri Tirumala
- Policy-implementation dynamics of national housing programmes in India – evidence from Madhya Pradesh pp. 500-521

- Sheuli Mitra
- Refusing slum-centric mass housing: indigenous urbanism and national housing programmes in Aizawl, India pp. 522-542

- Lalitha Kamath
- Outsiders in the periphery: studies of the peripheralisation of low income housing in Ahmedabad and Chennai, India pp. 543-569

- Karen Coelho, Darshini Mahadevia and Glyn Williams
- Commentary on the special issue titled ‘Housing policy and governance in India: orthodoxies, challenges and power’ pp. 570-577

- Amitabh Kundu
- Housing provision structures and the changing roles of actors in urban China since 1949 pp. 578-594

- Ruixia Chao and Rita Schneider-Sliwa
- Cities and affordable housing: planning, design and policy nexus pp. 595-598

- Gabriel Camară
Volume 22, issue 3, 2022
- Translating housing research to policy impact: rethinking policy and creating new publics through podcasts and documentary filmmaking pp. 319-328

- Dallas Rogers, Tom Baker, Emma Power and Tom Moore
- Documentary and resistance: There Goes Our Neighbourhood, #WeLiveHere2017 and the Waterloo estate redevelopment pp. 329-350

- Pratichi Chatterjee, Alistair Sisson, Jenna Condie, Laura Wynne, Clare Lewis and Catherine Skipper
- Reframing the contested city through ethnographic film: beyond the expository on housing and the urban pp. 351-370

- Nitin Bathla and Klearjos Eduardo Papanicolaou
- The struggle against home evictions in Spain through documentary films pp. 371-394

- Miguel A. Martínez and Javier Gil
- Reshaping housing pedagogy and public policy through documentaries in Lagos, Nigeria pp. 395-413

- Basirat Oyalowo, Deji Akinpelu and Timothy Nubi
- Scholars and artists collaborating for social change: the ‘In the Shadows of Ferguson’ multi-media project pp. 414-429

- Mai Thi Nguyen and Ashley Archer Tindall
- Local housing markets and local housing policies: a comparative analysis of 14 German cities pp. 430-450

- Dieter Rink and Björn Egner
- Understanding politics of effort in a right to housing pp. 451-454

- Samantha Thompson
- The people power strategies of the Pobladores housing movement? A review of the right to dignity: housing struggles, city making and citizenship in Urban Chile pp. 454-458

- Amanda Tattersall
- Heirs to the movement: Next generation housing activism in neoliberal Chile pp. 459-462

- Kristin Skrabut
- The housing movement in neoliberal Chile: paradoxes and contestations pp. 463-466

- Miguel Pérez
Volume 22, issue 2, 2022
- Public-cooperative policy mechanisms for housing commons pp. 149-173

- Mara Ferreri and Lorenzo Vidal
- The housing experiences of immigrants in a 'new immigrant gateway': an exploration of process in an era of ‘super-diversity’ pp. 174-197

- Mairéad Finn and Paula Mayock
- Residential mobility and spatial sorting in Stockholm 1990-2014: the changing importance of housing tenure and income pp. 198-224

- Andreas Alm Fjellborg
- Combustible costs! Financial implications of flammable cladding for homeowners pp. 225-250

- David Oswald, Trivess Moore and Simon Lockrey
- People power strategies in contemporary housing movements pp. 251-277

- Amanda Tattersall and Kurt Iveson
- Women’s housing: balancing scaling and caring in three Canadian cities pp. 278-298

- Carolyn Whitzman and Marie-Ève Desroches
- Genealogies of Ghana’s housing crisis: the role of colonial interventions and neoliberal reforms pp. 299-313

- Irene Appeaning Addo and Chika C. Mba
- The Private Rental Sector in Australia: living with uncertainty pp. 314-317

- Paulina Neisch
Volume 22, issue 1, 2022
- Informal housing practices in the global north: digital technologies, methods, and ethics pp. 1-9

- Sophia Maalsen, Pranita Shrestha and Nicole Gurran
- Is ‘informal’ housing an affordability solution for expensive cities? Evidence from Sydney, Australia pp. 10-33

- Nicole Gurran, Sophia Maalsen and Pranita Shrestha
- Can we use administrative data to quantify informal housing additions at the parcel level? An analysis of Austin, USA pp. 34-58

- Josh Conrad, Sarah Mawhorter and Jake Wegmann
- Risks and informality in owner-occupied shared housing: to let, or not to let? pp. 59-82

- Ashraful Alam, Claudio Minca and Khandakar Farid Uddin
- A sense of legitimacy in low-impact developments: experiences and perspectives of communities in South-West England pp. 83-105

- Emma Griffin, Katie McClymont and Adam Sheppard
- Reimagining (informal) housing futures in uncertain times pp. 106-118

- Redento B. Recio and Tanzil Shafique
- The effect of local housing allowance reductions on overcrowding in the private rented sector in England pp. 119-137

- Amy Clair
- The fall and rise of social housing: 100 years on 20 estates pp. 138-140

- Kath Scanlon
- Households and financialization in Europe – mapping variegated patterns in semi-peripheries pp. 140-144

- Gábor Nagy
- Paradoxes of segregation: housing systems, welfare regimes and ethnic residential change in Southern European cities pp. 145-148

- Ricardo Iglesias-Pascual and Ricardo Iglesias-Pascual
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