Details
Intersections of Housing Precarity, Health and Wellbeing in Diverse Global Settings
What Is Happening to Housing?Global Discourse 1. First Edition
42,99 € |
|
Verlag: | Bristol University Press |
Format: | EPUB |
Veröffentl.: | 01.04.2025 |
ISBN/EAN: | 9781529243864 |
Sprache: | englisch |
Anzahl Seiten: | 240 |
DRM-geschütztes eBook, Sie benötigen z.B. Adobe Digital Editions und eine Adobe ID zum Lesen.
Beschreibungen
This book examines the specific manifestations and causes of housing precarity across a diverse range of geographic settings and housing types.<br /><br />Das E-Book Intersections of Housing Precarity, Health and Wellbeing in Diverse Global Settings wird angeboten von Bristol University Press und wurde mit folgenden Begriffen kategorisiert:<br />
housing precarity, well-being, housing and health, housing equity, housing affordability
housing precarity, well-being, housing and health, housing equity, housing affordability
<p>Introduction – Kelly Greenop and Johanna Brugman Alvarez</p>
<p> 1. Aboriginal Social Housing in Remote Australia: Crowded, Unrepaired and Raising the Risk of Infectious Diseases – Paul Memmott, Nina Lansbury, Carroll Go-Sam, Daphne Nash, Andrew Martin Redmond, Samuel Barnes, Patrick (Pepy) Simpson, and Patricia Narr</p>
<p> - Reply to Memmott et al: It Is Time for Healthy Living Priorities to be Integrated Into Indigenous Housing Policy and Practice – Daphne Habibis</p>
<p> 2. Informal Housing and Residents’ Well-Being in Caracas and Sydney: A Comparative Study of Residents’ Experiences – Gabriela Quintana Vigiola</p>
<p> - Reply to Gabriela Quintana Vigiola: Informal Housing Residents’ Well-Being in Cities of the Global North and South – Kazi Nazrul Fattah</p>
<p> 3. Tenure Security, Housing Quality and Energy (In)justice in Dhaka’s Slums – Mark L.G. Jones</p>
<p> - Reply To Mark L.G. Jones: Tenure Security, Housing Quality and Energy (In)justice in Dhaka’s Slums – Vigya Sharma</p>
<p> 4. COVID-19 and Precarious Housing: Paying Guest Accommodation in a Metropolitan Indian City – Sai Rama Raju Marella, Krishna Priya, and Pooja Vincia D’Souza</p>
<p> - Reply to Raju Marella, Priya and Vincia D’Souza: The Impact of the COVID-19 Pandemic on Tenants and Operators in Marginal Housing Forms – Zahra Nasreen</p>
<p> 5. Empowerment Through Design? Housing Cooperatives for Women in Montreal – Ipek Turelli</p>
<p> 6. Housing Temporalities: State Narratives and Precarity in the Global South – Ruchika Lall</p>
<p> - Reply to Lall: Foregrounding Livelihood and Mobility in the Struggle for Pro-Poor Urban Housing – Redento B. Recio</p>
<p> - Reply to Lall: Housing Temporalities of the Aspiring Global City – Banashree Banerjee</p>
<p> 7. The Attributes of Social Resilience: Understanding Refugees’ Housing Choices – Francesca Perugia</p>
<p> - Reply to Perugia: Social Resilience and Refugee Housing: Questioning the Shift in Responsibility for Settlement – Iris Levin</p>
<p> 1. Aboriginal Social Housing in Remote Australia: Crowded, Unrepaired and Raising the Risk of Infectious Diseases – Paul Memmott, Nina Lansbury, Carroll Go-Sam, Daphne Nash, Andrew Martin Redmond, Samuel Barnes, Patrick (Pepy) Simpson, and Patricia Narr</p>
<p> - Reply to Memmott et al: It Is Time for Healthy Living Priorities to be Integrated Into Indigenous Housing Policy and Practice – Daphne Habibis</p>
<p> 2. Informal Housing and Residents’ Well-Being in Caracas and Sydney: A Comparative Study of Residents’ Experiences – Gabriela Quintana Vigiola</p>
<p> - Reply to Gabriela Quintana Vigiola: Informal Housing Residents’ Well-Being in Cities of the Global North and South – Kazi Nazrul Fattah</p>
<p> 3. Tenure Security, Housing Quality and Energy (In)justice in Dhaka’s Slums – Mark L.G. Jones</p>
<p> - Reply To Mark L.G. Jones: Tenure Security, Housing Quality and Energy (In)justice in Dhaka’s Slums – Vigya Sharma</p>
<p> 4. COVID-19 and Precarious Housing: Paying Guest Accommodation in a Metropolitan Indian City – Sai Rama Raju Marella, Krishna Priya, and Pooja Vincia D’Souza</p>
<p> - Reply to Raju Marella, Priya and Vincia D’Souza: The Impact of the COVID-19 Pandemic on Tenants and Operators in Marginal Housing Forms – Zahra Nasreen</p>
<p> 5. Empowerment Through Design? Housing Cooperatives for Women in Montreal – Ipek Turelli</p>
<p> 6. Housing Temporalities: State Narratives and Precarity in the Global South – Ruchika Lall</p>
<p> - Reply to Lall: Foregrounding Livelihood and Mobility in the Struggle for Pro-Poor Urban Housing – Redento B. Recio</p>
<p> - Reply to Lall: Housing Temporalities of the Aspiring Global City – Banashree Banerjee</p>
<p> 7. The Attributes of Social Resilience: Understanding Refugees’ Housing Choices – Francesca Perugia</p>
<p> - Reply to Perugia: Social Resilience and Refugee Housing: Questioning the Shift in Responsibility for Settlement – Iris Levin</p>
<p>Kelly Greenop is Senior Lecturer in Architecture and Community Development Lead at the School of Architecture at the University of Queensland, Australia.</p>
<p> </p>
<p> Johanna Brugman Alvarez is Lecturer in the School of Built Environment at the University of Technology, Sydney, Australia.</p>
<p> </p>
<p> Johanna Brugman Alvarez is Lecturer in the School of Built Environment at the University of Technology, Sydney, Australia.</p>
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