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Social Citizenship, Inequality and Homeownership. Postwar Perspectives from the North of Europe

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  14 November 2019

Jardar Sørvoll
Affiliation:
Oslo Metropolitan University, NOVA (Norwegian Social Research), E-mail: [email protected]
Viggo Nordvik
Affiliation:
Oslo Metropolitan University, NOVA (Norwegian Social Research), E-mail: [email protected]

Abstract

In this article, we analyse the social distribution of residential property in Norway post-1945 in light of the concept of social citizenship. Drawing on data from censuses and tax registers, we examine the social stratification of owner-occupation and housing wealth in a Nordic nation of homeowners. Our study shows that residential property and housing wealth is very unevenly distributed, and that the share of low-income homeowners decreased markedly after 1990. The implications of these findings are discussed with reference to three different conceptions of citizenship: the socio-liberal, the republican and the libertarian. Our main argument is that the falling rate of low-income owner-occupation constitutes an erosion of social citizenship viewed from the socio-liberal and republican conception of citizenship. This follows from theoretical arguments and empirical studies linking homeownership to positive welfare outcomes, such as civic engagement and social integration. The latter is arguably particularly true in some high-homeownership countries, such as Norway, where owner-occupation is the cultural norm and rental housing is associated with low quality and insecurity.

Type
Themed Section: Property and Social Citizenship
Copyright
© Cambridge University Press 2019

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