Housing in the European Countryside was funded by the Scottish Executive in 2000.
Overview
Housing in the European Countryside was funded by the Scottish Executive in 2000 but then extended to produce a review of housing pressure and policy responses across Western Europe. This work developed from a study funded by the Scottish Executive in 2000 that looked at international experiences of affordable housing delivery in rural areas.
This brought together researchers from the Netherlands, Germany, Spain, France, Norway, Sweden, Ireland, England, Scotland and Wales. The work revealed the form, nature and variety of problems now being experienced in different parts of Europe, in addition to outlining current policy solutions.
There are many facets of housing pressure in rural areas, not all of which are the consequences of economic or market forces. Factors that affect the prosperity of rural dwellers and affect rural space and residential property include:
- changing demographics and migration;
- cultural and societal attitudes towards rural and urban living and property acquisition;
- land use planning regulatory controls;
- the difficulty of securing affordable housing provision;
- a desirability for urban containment and countryside protection;
- the decline of traditional rural employment;
- the closure or absence of rural services;
- social exclusion;
- the constant environmental and social pressure placed on rural areas by tourism and economic development.
- People
Professor Nick Gallent
View Nick's profile
Send Nick an emailProfessor Mark Tewdwr-Jones
Professor Mark Shucksmith (University of Newcastle)
- Outputs
This project yielded an edited book and a project report:
Nick Gallent, Mark Shucksmith and Mark Tewdwr-Jones (eds.), Housing in the European Countryside: Housing Pressure and Policy in Western Europe, London, Routledge, 2003 (ISBN 0-415-28842-8 hb/ISBN 0-415-28843-6 pb)
Mark Shucksmith, Nick Gallent and Mark Tewdwr-Jones, International Experience of Pressured Rural Areas: Report to Scottish Homes, Aberdeen, Department of Land Economy, University of Aberdeen, 2000