Beds for rent
In: Economy and society, Band 53, Heft 1, S. 67-91
ISSN: 1469-5766
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In: Economy and society, Band 53, Heft 1, S. 67-91
ISSN: 1469-5766
In: Irish political studies: yearbook of the Political Studies Association of Ireland, Band 30, Heft 1, S. 143-145
ISSN: 1743-9078
In: Irish political studies: yearbook of the Political Studies Association of Ireland, Band 30, Heft 1, S. 143-145
ISSN: 1743-9078
In: Environment and planning. A
ISSN: 1472-3409
This article develops the concept of housing ideology in order to analyze the rise of co-living. Housing ideology refers to the dominant ideas and knowledge about housing that are used to justify and legitimize the housing system and its place within the broader political economy. Co-living is the term for privately operated, for-profit multiple occupancy rental housing. The article argues that the rise of co-living is supported by four key ideological elements—corporate futurism, technocratic urbanism, market populism and curated collectivism—which serve to legitimize co-living within the housing system and enable its profitability. The ideology of co-living appears to critique many elements of the contemporary urban housing system. But despite its critical self-image, co-living does not represent an alternative to today's financialized urbanization. Ultimately, the article argues for the importance of understanding the role of housing ideologies in residential change.
In: Home
Co-living housing-as-a-service and COVID-19 : micro-housing and institutional precarity / Tegan Bergan & Rae Dufty-Jones -- Shifting domesticities in the Metropole Hotel / Jeffrey Kruth -- Political narratives of shrinking domesticities in Helsinki and Vienna / Johanna Lilius, Michael Friesenecker & Maximilian Krankl -- Shrinking aspirations : the potential impact of build to rent models on housing transitions / Daniel Durrant & Frances Brill -- Glamorising the materiality of 'living small' : de-stuffocation, storage, and tiny living aesthetics / Jen Owen -- Freedom or dispossession? : imaginaries of small, mobile living in the film Nomadland / Harris, E., Nowicki, M. and White, T. -- Decent homes in compact living? : conventional ideals in unconventional contexts / Anne Hedegaard Winther -- The tiny home lifestyle (THL) : a contemporary response to the neoliberalisation of housing / Megan Carras -- Understanding tiny house sustainabilities throught the lens of frictions / Hilton Penfold, Gordon Waitt and Pauline McGuirk -- Meshing with your home : seeking trouble in sharing dwelled spaces / Lauren Wagner & Clemens Driessen -- Minimalist lifestyles : performance, animism and desire for degrowth / Miriam Meissner -- Tiny houses and the economics of sufficiency : how 'shrinking domesticities' fit within the degrowth paradigm / Samuel Alexander and Heather Shearer -- Tiny living as an everyday practice of sufficiency : some experiences of tiny house owners in Germany / Petra Lütkey & Loisa Elbracht -- The tiny house movement : ecology, survival and inequality / Jenny Pickerill, Adam Barker & Jingjing Wang -- Cluster apartments : living with less as a model for lived solidarity? / Manuel Lutz -- Heterotopia : a new perspective on female-led tiny house projects / Alice Wilson.
Co-living housing-as-a-service and COVID-19 : micro-housing and institutional precarity / Tegan Bergan & Rae Dufty-Jones -- Shifting domesticities in the Metropole Hotel / Jeffrey Kruth -- Political narratives of shrinking domesticities in Helsinki and Vienna / Johanna Lilius, Michael Friesenecker & Maximilian Krankl -- Shrinking aspirations : the potential impact of build to rent models on housing transitions / Daniel Durrant & Frances Brill -- Glamorising the materiality of 'living small' : de-stuffocation, storage, and tiny living aesthetics / Jen Owen -- Freedom or dispossession? : imaginaries of small, mobile living in the film Nomadland / Harris, E., Nowicki, M. and White, T. -- Decent homes in compact living? : conventional ideals in unconventional contexts / Anne Hedegaard Winther -- The tiny home lifestyle (THL) : a contemporary response to the neoliberalisation of housing / Megan Carras -- Understanding tiny house sustainabilities throught the lens of frictions / Hilton Penfold, Gordon Waitt and Pauline McGuirk -- Meshing with your home : seeking trouble in sharing dwelled spaces / Lauren Wagner & Clemens Driessen -- Minimalist lifestyles : performance, animism and desire for degrowth / Miriam Meissner -- Tiny houses and the economics of sufficiency : how 'shrinking domesticities' fit within the degrowth paradigm / Samuel Alexander and Heather Shearer -- Tiny living as an everyday practice of sufficiency : some experiences of tiny house owners in Germany / Petra Lütkey & Loisa Elbracht -- The tiny house movement : ecology, survival and inequality / Jenny Pickerill, Adam Barker & Jingjing Wang -- Cluster apartments : living with less as a model for lived solidarity? / Manuel Lutz -- Heterotopia : a new perspective on female-led tiny house projects / Alice Wilson.
Co-living housing-as-a-service and COVID-19 : micro-housing and institutional precarity / Tegan Bergan & Rae Dufty-Jones -- Shifting domesticities in the Metropole Hotel / Jeffrey Kruth -- Political narratives of shrinking domesticities in Helsinki and Vienna / Johanna Lilius, Michael Friesenecker & Maximilian Krankl -- Shrinking aspirations : the potential impact of build to rent models on housing transitions / Daniel Durrant & Frances Brill -- Glamorising the materiality of 'living small' : de-stuffocation, storage, and tiny living aesthetics / Jen Owen -- Freedom or dispossession? : imaginaries of small, mobile living in the film Nomadland / Harris, E., Nowicki, M. and White, T. -- Decent homes in compact living? : conventional ideals in unconventional contexts / Anne Hedegaard Winther -- The tiny home lifestyle (THL) : a contemporary response to the neoliberalisation of housing / Megan Carras -- Understanding tiny house sustainabilities throught the lens of frictions / Hilton Penfold, Gordon Waitt and Pauline McGuirk -- Meshing with your home : seeking trouble in sharing dwelled spaces / Lauren Wagner & Clemens Driessen -- Minimalist lifestyles : performance, animism and desire for degrowth / Miriam Meissner -- Tiny houses and the economics of sufficiency : how 'shrinking domesticities' fit within the degrowth paradigm / Samuel Alexander and Heather Shearer -- Tiny living as an everyday practice of sufficiency : some experiences of tiny house owners in Germany / Petra Lütkey & Loisa Elbracht -- The tiny house movement : ecology, survival and inequality / Jenny Pickerill, Adam Barker & Jingjing Wang -- Cluster apartments : living with less as a model for lived solidarity? / Manuel Lutz -- Heterotopia : a new perspective on female-led tiny house projects / Alice Wilson.
In: Home
"This book examines the growing trend for housing models that shrink private living space and seeks to understand the implications of these shrinking domestic worlds. Small spaces have become big business. Reducing the size of our homes, and the amount of stuff within them, is increasingly sold as a catch-all solution to the stresses of modern life and the need to reduce our carbon footprint. Shrinking living space is being repackaged in a neoliberal capitalist context as a lifestyle choice rather than the consequence of diminishing choice in the face of what has become a long-term housing 'crisis'. What does this mean for how we live in the long term, and is there a dark side to the promise of a simpler, more sustainable home life? Shrinking Domesticities brings together research from across the social sciences, planning and architecture to explore these issues. From co-living developments to the Tiny House movement, self-storage units to practices of 'de-stuffification', and drawing on examples from across Europe, North America and Australasia, the authors of this volume seek to understand both what micro-living is bringing to our societies, and what it may be eroding"--
In: Home Ser.
Cover -- Half Title -- Series Information -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Table of Contents -- Contributors -- Introduction -- The Book's Conceptual Contribution -- Overview of Sections -- References -- 1 Co-Living Housing-As-A-Service and COVID-19: Micro-Housing and Institutional Precarity -- Introduction -- New York City, Co-Living Housing, and COVID-19 -- Co-living 'Housing-As-A-Service' -- Co-living Housing-As-A-Mobility-Service Under COVID-19 -- Co-living Housing-As-A-Workspace-Service Under COVID-19 -- Co-living Housing-As-A-Community-Service Under COVID-19 -- Conclusion -- Notes -- References -- 2 Shifting Domesticities in the Metropole Hotel -- Introduction -- Domestication, Movement, and Use in the Urban Interior -- The Metropole as a Domestic Public -- The Metropole as Domestic Capital -- From Domestic Platform to Kinship -- References -- 3 Political Narratives of Shrinking Domesticities in Helsinki and Vienna -- Introduction -- Narratives of Dwelling Size and Space -- Helsinki: Chicken Cages for Landlords Or Homes for City Residents? -- Contemporary Trends in Dwelling Size and Overcrowding -- Contested Narratives Between the Growing Number of Small Households and Social Sustainability -- Vienna: Shrinking Domesticities Between Profit Interests and Affordable Housing -- Contemporary Trends in Dwelling Size and Overcrowding -- Contested Narratives Between Profit, Housing Quality, and Affordability -- Discussion and Conclusions -- Note -- References -- 4 Shrinking Aspirations: The Potential Impact of Build to Rent Models On Housing Transitions -- Introduction -- Housing Careers -- Housing in London -- Making and Marketing of BTR -- Shrinking Private Space -- Curated Domesticity -- Discussion: Shrinking Aspirations? -- Conclusion -- References.
Summarization: European Union policy on soil threats and soil protection has prioritized new research to address global soil threats. This research draws on the methodology of Critical Zone Observatories (CZOs) to focus a critical mass of international, multidisciplinary expertise at specific field sites. These CZOs were selected as part of an experimental design to study soil processes and ecosystem function along a hypothesized soil life cycle—from incipient soil formation where new parent material is being deposited, to highly degraded soils that have experienced millennia of intensive land use. Further CZOs have been selected to broaden the range of soil environments and data sets to test soil process models that represent the stages of the soil life cycle. The scientific methodology for this research focuses on the central role of soil structure and soil aggregate formation and stability in soil processes. Research methods include detailed analysis and mathematical modeling of soil properties related to aggregate formation and their relation to key processes of reactive transport, nutrient transformation, and C and food web dynamics in soil ecosystems. Within this program of research, quantification of soil processes across an international network of CZOs is focused on understanding soil ecosystem services including their quantitative monetary valuation within the soil life cycle. Further experimental design at the global scale is enabled by this type of international CZO network. One example is a proposed experiment to study soil ecosystem services along planetary-scale environmental gradients. This would allow scientists to gain insight into the responses of soil processes to increasing human pressures on Earth's critical zone that arise through rapidly changing land use and climate. ; Presented on: Vadose Zone Journal
BASE
In: Plains anthropologist, Band 39, Heft 147, S. 81-117
ISSN: 2052-546X
In: Environmental science and pollution research: ESPR, Band 21, Heft 4, S. 3191-3195
ISSN: 1614-7499