House, Home, and Community

Progress in Housing Canadians, 1945 -1986

By John R. Miron
Categories: Planning (urban & Regional)
Publisher: McGill-Queen's University Press
Ebook (PDF) : 9780773563926, 464 pages, April 1993

Description

The contributors identify important considerations for evaluating the current and future housing situation, clarify housing research issues and priorities, and indicate emergent policy issues. The essays are divided into six sections: economic, demographic, and institutional factors underlying the postwar demand for housing; principal aspects of the supply side of housing, including housing finance, technology, and regulation; housing-stock growth and changes in housing quality; the balance of supply and demand in terms of adequacy, suitability, and affordability; the changing settlement environment; and lessons, challenges, and issues for the future. The book also contains valuable summaries of housing policy initiatives undertaken between 1945 and 1986. An essential reference document on urban housing and city development in the postwar period in Canada, House, Home, and Community will be valuable to academics, planners, professionals, and students with interests related to housing.

Reviews

"This collection is a milestone in discussions about Canadian housing analysis ... There is nothing elsewhere in Canada that covers this material in such a comprehensive or up-to-date manner." Robert Murdie, Department of Geography, York University.
"No other book on housing in Canada provides anything close to the breadth of information this book offers ... The contributions are well polished and of a high calibre." Pierre Filion, School of Urban and Regional Planning, University of Waterloo.

"This collection is a milestone in discussions about Canadian housing analysis ... There is nothing elsewhere in Canada that covers this material in such a comprehensive or up-to-date manner." Robert Murdie, Department of Geography, York University. "No other book on housing in Canada provides anything close to the breadth of information this book offers ... The contributions are well polished and of a high calibre." Pierre Filion, School of Urban and Regional Planning, University of Waterloo.