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Urban Sustainability & Governance - New Challengers in Nordic-Baltic Housing Policies (Hardcover)
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Urban Sustainability & Governance - New Challengers in Nordic-Baltic Housing Policies (Hardcover)
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Urban sustainability and governance in relation to housing trends
and policies is the focus of this book written by leading Nordic
and Baltic housing researchers. The empirical examples are from the
Baltic transition economies and the Nordic welfare states. For a
number of reasons it is, however, of interest for outside this
region. Firstly, the global challenges of sustainable development
and planning, presented in the theoretical section, are clarified
and given a deeper practical meaning through the empirical
chapters. The contrasts between the post-solicalist Baltic states
and the social-democrat Nordic countries are in this context of
special value. Secondly, the general challenges facing the
post-socialist states are demonstrated in the housing development
and policies evolving since 1991, as these integrate both social,
economic and environmental issues. Thirdly, the book illustrates
how path dependencies and former legacies influence present
developments, which, contrary to common beliefs, differ between the
5 Nordic and the 3 Baltic states. It is crucial reading for
students and actors in planning and housing in the Baltic and
Nordic states. The Nordic countries developed its post- WWII
housing and welfare policies in the framework of a social-democrat
egalitarian spirit resulting in co-ops dominating much of the scene
in Norway, municipal housing companies in Sweden, non-profit local
housing associations in Denmark and housing with special state
loans in Finland. In the same period Soviet state-socialist
intentions formed the basis of large-scale uniform housing estates
providing standard housing for the masses in the Baltic states.
Privatisation in the east and increasing market liberalisation in
the west have created new social cleavages on the housing scene.
There are striking policy differences between the Nordic and Baltic
states, but also similarities, both before the 1991 collapse of the
Soviet Union, and in recent trends and challenges. The book
provides a crucial common ground for reciporcal learning in the
field of housing and planning.
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