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Original Articles

Housing advantage? the role of student renting in the constitution of housing biographies in the United Kingdom

Pages 19-34 | Published online: 17 May 2006
 

Abstract

Research on young people leaving the parental home has tended to focus most closely on charting and explaining the age at which young people leave, and exploring the incidence of returning after a period of living either ‘semi‐autonomously’ or independently. The majority of these studies have been quantitative and fairly static in approach. This paper develops an approach to the topic that is more qualitative in its orientation and that views housing biographies as essentially dynamic. Using primary data from the United Kingdom, the paper constructs five ‘ideal’ typical housing pathways followed by young people: a chaotic pathway, and unplanned pathway, a constrained pathway, a planned (non‐student) pathway, and a student pathway. The paper then gives particular consideration to the characteristics of the student pathway, and compares the experience of students studying away from the parental home with the long‐term housing biographies of their non‐student peers. The paper concludes that the typical student housing experience—including a supervised leaving of the parental home and a ‘sheltered’ spell in the private rented sector—constitutes an essential education in housing that enhances the housing and labour opportunities of graduates compared with other young people who have not studied away from the parental home.

Notes

Correspondence to: Julie Rugg, Centre for Housing Policy, University of York, Heslington, York YO10 5DD, UK. Tel: +44 (0)1904 321484; Fax: +44 (0)1904 625411; Email: [email protected]. This research is based on material from two large‐scale studies, each of which comprised qualitative and quantitative elements: the ESRC‐funded project ‘Young people, housing and the transition to adult life: understanding the dynamics’ (award number L134251013); and the Joseph Rowntree Foundation‐funded ‘The nature and impact of student housing markets within the private rented sector’. Thanks are expressed to both funders for their support.

Additional information

Notes on contributors

Julie Rugg Footnote

Correspondence to: Julie Rugg, Centre for Housing Policy, University of York, Heslington, York YO10 5DD, UK. Tel: +44 (0)1904 321484; Fax: +44 (0)1904 625411; Email: [email protected]. This research is based on material from two large‐scale studies, each of which comprised qualitative and quantitative elements: the ESRC‐funded project ‘Young people, housing and the transition to adult life: understanding the dynamics’ (award number L134251013); and the Joseph Rowntree Foundation‐funded ‘The nature and impact of student housing markets within the private rented sector’. Thanks are expressed to both funders for their support.

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