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Understanding changing housing aspirations: a review of the evidence
Authors:Jenny Preece  Joe Crawford  Kim McKee  John Flint  David Robinson
Affiliation:1. Urban Studies and Planning, University of Sheffield, Sheffield, UK;2. Preecejenny.preece@sheffield.ac.uk;4. Faculty of Social Science, University of Stirling, Stirling, UK;5. Department of Geography, University of Sheffield, Sheffield, UK
Abstract:Abstract

This article reviews the literature on changing housing aspirations and expectations in contemporary housing systems. It argues that there is a conceptual and definitional gap in relation to the term ‘housing aspirations’, as distinct from expectations, preferences, choices and needs. The article sets out working definitions of these terms, before discussing the evidence on changing housing (and related) systems. Emerging research has begun to consider whether trends such as declining homeownership, affordability concerns and precarious labour systems across a range of countries are fundamentally changing individuals’ aspirations for the forms of housing they aim to access at different stages of their lives. Whilst much of the research into housing aspirations has been considered in terms of tenure, and homeownership in particular, this article suggests that research needs to move beyond tenure and choice frameworks, to consider the range of dimensions that shape aspirations, from the political economy and the State to socialization and individuals’ dispositions for housing.
Keywords:Housing affordability  housing aspirations  housing choice  housing policy
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