Housing and  Social Cohesion in Densely Settled Denmark

Hedvig Vestergaard

    Research output: Contribution to book/anthology/report/conference proceedingBook chapterResearch

    Abstract

    The chapter focuses on the economic, political and social issues facing housing in Denmark in a Nordic and Baltic context. After a brief historical introduction of the tenure structure and settlement pattern the chapter describe and analyses the changing policy and practice of housing in Denmark. Until 2001 housing and housing policy questions were rather neglected subjects in the Danish policy debate. For a number of years the focus had mainly been on urban and urban policy questions. But increasing difficulties for households gaining access to affordable housing in economic pressure areas like Copenhagen spurred a heated debate. The non-availability of private rented housing, long waiting lists for non-profit housing, the increasing house prices in the owner occupied sector and the concentration of socially deprived and ethnic minorities on an increasing number of non-profit housing estates all became matters for discussion. The chapter includes case studies on housing estates in an urban neighbourhood in the town Helsingør in the Capital region of Copenhagen.
    Original languageEnglish
    Title of host publicationURBAN SUSTAINABILITY AND GOVERNANCE : NEW CHALLENGES IN NORDIC-BALTIC HOUSING POLICIES
    EditorsArild Holt-Jensen, Eric Pollock
    Place of PublicationNew York
    PublisherNova Science Publishers
    Publication date2009
    Pages133-149
    ISBN (Print)978-1-60456-886-8
    Publication statusPublished - 2009

    Keywords

    • housing policy
    • governance
    • social cohesion
    • non-profit housing
    • social housing
    • tenure systems
    • Helsingør

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