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Social housing opportunities and challenges: Perspectives from Denmark, Germany, Portugal and Serbia, vol 40

Edited by Sónia Alves, Hans Thor Andersen, Els Keunen and Zlata Vuksanović-Macura

in Arbeitsberichte der ARL from ARL – Akademie für Raumentwicklung in der Leibniz-Gemeinschaft

Abstract: In recent decades, European housing systems have faced significant challenges, including rising socioeconomic inequalities, demographic shifts, welfare cuts, the financialization of housing markets, and ongoing affordability crises. The Delivering Safe and Social Housing (DASH) project, carried out by a consortium of institutions from Denmark, Germany, Portugal, and Serbia, explores these issues by comparing national social and affordable housing regimes and approaches and practices in medium-sized cities (Aalborg, Tübingen, Braga, and éCaécak). This publication aims to highlight both the structural differences and similarities in providing social and affordable housing opportunities. The findings reveal the notable diversity of European housing systems. Denmark's universalist, association-based model contrasts with Serbia's residual, ad hoc approach; Germany blends limited social housing with broader rent controls, while Portugal has traditionally focused on homeownership, but it now recognises the need for a regulated, publicly owned rental sector serving low- and middle-income families. These paths, influenced by factors such as postsocialist privatisation, economic crises, or welfare reforms, show how social housing remains highly dependent on context. Nonetheless, common issues remain: matching housing supply with changing demographics and mobility; financing provision under fiscal constraints and increasing construction costs; and tackling urban pressures from gentrification, tourism, and migration. Policy debates include Denmark's contested "parallel societies" laws, Portugal's EU-funded reforms, Germany's efforts to increase supply amid inflation risks, and Serbia's limited political focus on housing. At the local level, innovative municipal strategies present promising options. At a time when European focus on affordability is renewed, this publication demonstrates how diverse histories, institutional frameworks, and local initiatives come together around the urgent need to secure social housing as a key element of fair and sustainable urban growth.

Keywords: Social housing; affordability; housing policy; international comparative analysis; Europe (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2026
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Downloads: (external link)
https://www.econstor.eu/bitstream/10419/337519/1/1963253574.pdf (application/pdf)

Chapters in this book:

Foreword: Social housing in times of transformation , pp 1 Downloads
Antje Bruns
Introduction , pp 2-7 Downloads
Sónia Alves, Hans Thor Andersen, Els Keunen and Zlata Vuksanović-Macura
The Danish report , pp 8-23 Downloads
Hans Thor Andersen, Rikke Skovgaard Nielsen, Lene Wiell Nordberg, Sven Buch and Anne Juel Andersen
The German report , pp 24-48 Downloads
Els Keunen, Julia Hartmann, Axel Burkhardt and Astrid Ley
The Portuguese report , pp 49-74 Downloads
Sónia Alves, Alda Botelho Azevedo, Marco Allegra, Filipa Leite, Inês Calor and Pedro Moura Ferreira
The Serbian report , pp 75-94 Downloads
Zlata Vuksanović-Macura, Brankica Jelić, Marko Filipović and Dejan Doljak
Conclusion , pp 98-103 Downloads
Marco Allegra and Els Keunen

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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:zbw:arlabe:337519

DOI: 10.60683/49v1-jz17

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