Downsizing of Housing: Negotiating Sufficiency and Spatial Norms

Housing is one of the major sources of the environmental impact of consumption. An aspect of housing that has rarely been considered in previous studies on sustainable housing is the size of the dwelling, even though research has shown the impact of dwelling size on the environmental impact of housing to be significant. This study analyzes socio-cultural meanings about downsizing as well as norms about dwelling size. The study analyzes naturally occurring, cultural texts (media texts and corporate communications about small-sized dwellings). The study offers a view on how the meaning of downsizing is negotiated, the (in)voluntariness of downsizing emerging as the main point to be negotiated.

Context and quantification

About the policy

Area

Social Rights, Climate Action

Instrument

Policy advice, Incentives

Intervention

Downsizing

Cost

None

Funding

None

Institutional arrangement

None

Impacts

Stakeholders involved

Local housing authorities

Stakeholders impacted

Residents

Wellbeing

Housing

Justice consideration

Recognitional

Metadata

Lead author nameMaria Sandberg
Lead author genderFemale
Lead author institutionHanken School of Economics
Lead author institution locationFinland
Peer reviewed?true
Grey literature?false
Type of paperResearch article
Volume38
Publication year2018
URL / DOIdoi:10.1177/0276146717748355
Sufficiency mentioned?true