Do post-prison job opportunities reduce recidivism?
In: IZA world of labor: evidence-based policy making
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In: IZA world of labor: evidence-based policy making
In: Critical housing analysis, Band 8, Heft 1, S. 141-149
ISSN: 2336-2839
Supporters of short-term rental (STR) platforms state that STRs represent a small fraction of the housing market of major cities and therefore have little impact on rents. However, there is emerging evidence that suggests that STRs have highly localised impacts. In this article, we use the natural experiment of the pause in tourism caused by the COVID-19 pandemic to highlight the impact of a decrease in STR listings on rental markets in the case study city of Hobart, Australia. We find that rental affordability has improved in Hobart's STR-dense suburbs with the increased vacancies from the underutilised STR properties. These results provide evidence of the impact of STRs on local housing markets when analysed on a finer scale than the whole-of-city approach. The focus on local housing markets helps local communities and city governments build an argument for the impact of STRs on tight housing markets.
In: IZA world of labor: evidence-based policy making
ISSN: 2054-9571
In: Critical housing analysis, Band 8, Heft 1, S. 107-118
ISSN: 2336-2839
Airbnb, the most ubiquitous of the many online short-term rental platforms offering residential homes to tourists, has infiltrated local neighbourhoods and housing markets throughout the world. It has also divided policy-makers and communities over whether tourism in residential homes is a benign example of the so-called 'sharing' economy or a malignant practice which destroys neighbourhoods. These differing positions reflect alternative and changing notions of 'home' within wider processes of financialisation and platform capitalism. This paper examines these themes with reference to stakeholder statements solicited in response to government inquiries on how to regulate short-term rental housing in Australia.
In: IZA world of labor: evidence-based policy making
In: Contemporary Southeast Asia, Band 42, Heft 1, S. 129-131
In: Critical housing analysis, Band 8, Heft 1, S. 101-106
ISSN: 2336-2839
Editorial.
In: Critical housing analysis, Band 8, Heft 1, S. 119-128
ISSN: 2336-2839
The popularity of short-term letting (STL) platforms like Airbnb has created housing and planning challenges for cities worldwide, including the potential impact of STL on the quality of life of nearby residents and communities. Underpinning this concern is an inherent tension in urban living between the rights and interests of individual residents and the collective rights and interests of neighbours. Through interviews with Australian Airbnb hosts, this paper examines how STL hosts navigate this tension, including how they frame their rights, how they seek to minimise impacts on neighbours, and how they perceive the role of regulation in balancing individual and community rights. In doing so, the paper contributes to both theory and policy debates about urban property rights and how 'compact city' planning orthodoxies are reshaping the lived experience of urban residents worldwide.