Research roundup

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Emma LindleyBy HQN Associate Emma Lindley

 

Housing demand

Housing allocations and the vacancy chain: How coordinating chains can better meet housing needs and tenant choice

This report from the Smith Institute is an exploration into the factors influencing vacancy chains in London’s social housing – the analysis is focused on how different types of letting do and don’t release new social housing bedspaces, and how different stresses in allocations policies and lettings quotas influence the length of chains in social housing lettings and categories of housing need being met.

 

Housing unaffordability and mental health: Dynamics across age and tenure

This paper examines changing trends in housing affordability in the Netherlands and its link to mental health across tenures and age cohorts. It finds a clear link between living in housing that’s unaffordable and poorer mental health scores, and this association is particularly strong among renters and younger people.

 

Drivers of housing (un)affordability in the advanced economies: A review and new evidence

This Housing Studies journal article provides an overview of some of the major drivers of the housing affordability crisis in the advanced economies and spans a wide range of factors, including welfare state retrenchment; land, construction, and other development costs; demographic shifts; race and inequality; income and inequality; the financialization of housing; and NIMBYism.

 

Housing and the cost of living

This House of Commons Library briefing paper considers the impact of inflation on rent and mortgage payments and the government response.

 

Homelessness

Dispersing homeless people fails to stop antisocial behaviour, finds study

Dispersing rough sleepers from town centres fails to stop so-called antisocial behaviour and wrongly criminalises homeless people, a study of 10 towns by criminologists at Sheffield Hallam University has found.

 

Is the Westminster government on track to meet its manifesto commitment to “end the blight of rough sleeping” in England by the end of this Parliament?

The report by the All-Party Parliamentary Group inquiry into the government’s progress tackling rough sleeping.

 

The Kerslake Commission on Homelessness and Rough Sleeping: A new way of working: Ending rough sleeping together

This Progress Report examines what progress has been made on the Conservative Party manifesto commitment to end rough sleeping by 2024. The commission – chaired by the former Head of the Civil Service, Lord Bob Kerslake – is an independent group of 36 experts from the health, housing and homelessness sectors, including people with lived experience, as well as representatives from local and national government.

 

Evaluation of the Housing First Pilots: Third Process Report

This DLUHC report is the third report of the process evaluation of the Housing First Pilots.

 

PRS

High standards: Developing a property improvement model for the private rented sector in Greater Manchester

This report proposes a financial model for improving private property in Greater Manchester that offers low-cost loans or financing which provides significant paybacks equal to or greater than tax incentives.

 

Understanding the mental health impacts of poor-quality private-rented housing during the UK’s first Covid-19 lockdown

This Health & Place journal article examines the mental health impacts of poor-quality private-rented housing in the north of England during the UK’s first Covid-19 lockdown.

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