Bad news for satisfied tenants: On the social construction of social rented housing as dreadful enclosures

Authors

  • Pascal De Decker
  • Isabelle Pannecoucke Antwerp University

Abstract

As long as the social rented sector - which comprised 6% of the housing stock - housed traditional families and the allocation procedures were rather loose, little commotion came about. A combination of changes in family structures (leading to the in stream of ethnic minorities), economic changes (leading to the in stream of poor people), and the strengthening of allocation procedures towards those most in need, did change perceptions. Marginalisation and ghettoisation became during the 1990s the buzzwords when talking and writing about social rented housing. In this article, we will explain the background of the scapegoat trends and the possible consequences for social tenants in particular and for the social rental housing in general.

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Author Biography

Isabelle Pannecoucke, Antwerp University

Researchers at OASeS (Research Group on Poverty, Social Exclusion and the City)

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Published

2024-01-12

How to Cite

De Decker, P., & Pannecoucke, I. (2024). Bad news for satisfied tenants: On the social construction of social rented housing as dreadful enclosures. Ética, economía Y Bienes Comunes, 2(1). Retrieved from https://journal.upaep.mx/index.php/EthicsEconomicsandCommonGoods/article/view/52

Issue

Section

Research articles