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 name | Maria Sandberg |
---|---|
Lead author gender | Female |
Lead author institution | Hanken School of Economics |
Lead author institution location | Finland |
Peer reviewed? | true |
Grey literature? | false |
Type of paper | Research article |
Volume | 38 |
Publication year | 2018 |
URL / DOI | doi:10.1177/0276146717748355 |
Sufficiency mentioned? | true |