Research output: Other contribution
Data and methods required to explore housing space inequality in England and Wales, 1911-2011 : Online appendix to article in the International Journal of Housing Policy, ‘Relative housing inequality: A century of decline in housing space inequality in England and Wales and its recent rapid resurgence’. / Tunstall, Becky.
4 p. Centre for Housing Policy, University of York. 2014, appendix to an article.Research output: Other contribution
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TY - GEN
T1 - Data and methods required to explore housing space inequality in England and Wales, 1911-2011
T2 - Online appendix to article in the International Journal of Housing Policy, ‘Relative housing inequality: A century of decline in housing space inequality in England and Wales and its recent rapid resurgence’
AU - Tunstall, Becky
PY - 2014
Y1 - 2014
N2 - This paper aimed to explore whether relative, as well as absolute, low consumption of housing space has reduced in England and Wales over the twentieth century, and whether the distribution of housing space has become more or less equal over that time. Measuring relative consumption demands continuous concepts and data. However, most studies of housing inequality have been restricted to counting numbers and proportions meeting or failing absolute minima, or to contrasting the proportions of poor and non-poor meeting minima. This has been partly due to the absence of the required data (eg. Dorling et al., 2005).To remedy these problems, this analysis is based on the creation of a new quasicontinuous data set for housing space consumption in England and Wales. It uses data on the number of private households with different combinations of numbers of rooms and numbers of people. This is available decennially for England and Wales from the census of population for 1911-2011, with the exception of 1941 when the census was suspended due to war. No other source provides such a long run of comparable data on housing space.
AB - This paper aimed to explore whether relative, as well as absolute, low consumption of housing space has reduced in England and Wales over the twentieth century, and whether the distribution of housing space has become more or less equal over that time. Measuring relative consumption demands continuous concepts and data. However, most studies of housing inequality have been restricted to counting numbers and proportions meeting or failing absolute minima, or to contrasting the proportions of poor and non-poor meeting minima. This has been partly due to the absence of the required data (eg. Dorling et al., 2005).To remedy these problems, this analysis is based on the creation of a new quasicontinuous data set for housing space consumption in England and Wales. It uses data on the number of private households with different combinations of numbers of rooms and numbers of people. This is available decennially for England and Wales from the census of population for 1911-2011, with the exception of 1941 when the census was suspended due to war. No other source provides such a long run of comparable data on housing space.
KW - housing space
KW - inequality
KW - Research Methods
M3 - Other contribution
PB - Centre for Housing Policy, University of York
ER -