This book is the result of the successful collaboration between two research networks: the Housing Law Working Group of the European Network for Housing Research (ENHR) and the TENLAW research network. It deals with evictions, their social background and regulation under procedural and human rights law; housing problems of indigenous and ethnic minorities and immigrants; the relationship between landlords, tenants and agents and the private rental sector; housing satisfaction and the instruments and models to measure it; and finally national instances of the European housing crises in Spain, Germany and Romania. The contributions in this volume will further enhance the understanding of housing law and rights, and provide useful materials for future comparative analysis.
Houses, Homes and the Law is the third volume in the series that seeks to examine the many facets of housing law from a variety of academic and professional perspectives.
Common trends in eviction research: a systematic literature review
Michel Vols, Alexandre Belloir, Mareike Hoffman, Andrew Zuidema
págs. 1-87
The right to have a house: indigenous and ethnic minorities and their fight over their right to identity
págs. 89-101
Reality versus rhetoric: an analysis of the implementation gap in provision of traveller-specific housing in Ireland
págs. 103-127
Acess of immigrants to the public housing system: the case of Italy
págs. 129-146
Recent decisions of the Committee on economic, social and cultural rights to housing in Spain (2017-2018): Ben Djazia et al., forced evictions and judicial developments
págs. 147-164
Do evictions violate an actual fundamental right?: the influence of european human rights discourse on right to housing in Spain
págs. 165-181
Evictions on grounds of "antisocial behaviour" in Denmark: aspects on tenancy law regulations and the protection of human rights
págs. 183-200
Landlordsand tenants: between contracts, property and social relations
págs. 201-227
Navigation the rules: legal provisions and dutch estate agencies' tactis to circumvent the law
págs. 229-251
"We shall not discriminate!": can/will flanders private rental sector keep up their promise?
págs. 253-285
The spanish housing crisis: between autonomic social action and neoliberal recentralization
págs. 287-309
Housing satisfaction in Germany: why germany's houses policy will not make people happier
págs. 311-331
Urban-rural interactions: mutual benefits and new challenges
págs. 333-346
págs. 347-365
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