2,294
Views
21
CrossRef citations to date
0
Altmetric
Articles

Housing pathways, aspirations and preferences of young adults within increasing urban density

ORCID Icon, ORCID Icon & ORCID Icon
Pages 123-142 | Received 12 May 2018, Accepted 14 Feb 2019, Published online: 04 Apr 2019

References

  • Aalbers, M. B. (2008) The financialization of home and the mortgage market crisis, Competition & Change, 12(2), pp. 148–166.
  • Allen, N. (2016) Quality of urban life and intensification: understanding housing choices, trade-offs, and the role of urban amenities, Doctoral dissertation. The University of Auckland, 2016.
  • Auckland Regional Council (2010) Future Land Use and Transport Planning Project: Future Housing Demand Study (Auckland: Auckland Regional Council).
  • Badland, H. M., Oliver, M., Kearns, R. A., Mavoa, S., Witten, K., Duncan, M. J. & Batty, G. D. (2012) Association of neighbourhood residence and preferences with the built environment, work-related travel behaviours, and health implications for employed adults: findings from the URBAN study, Social Science and Medicine, 75(8), pp. 1469–1476.
  • Bean, C. E., Kearns, R. A. & Collins, D. (2008) Exploring social mobilities: narratives of walking and driving in Auckland, New Zealand, Urban Studies, 45(13), pp. 2829–2848.
  • Beck, U. & Beck-Gernsheim, E. (2002) Individualisation (London: Sage).
  • Blaauboer, M. (2011) The impact of childhood experiences and family members outside the household on residential environment choices, Urban Studies, 48(8), pp. 1635–1650.
  • Bramley (2013) Housing market models and planning, Town Planning Review, 84(1), pp. 9–35.
  • Bruce, M. & Kelly, S. (2013) Expectations, identity and affordability: the housing dreams of Australia’s Generation Y, Housing, Theory and Society, 30(4), pp. 416–432.
  • Carroll, P., Witten, K. & Kearns, R. (2011) Housing intensification in Auckland, New Zealand: Implications for children and families, Housing Studies, 26(3), pp. 353–367.
  • Castro Campos, B., Yiu, C. Y., Shen, J., Liao, K. H. & Maing, M. (2016) The anticipated housing pathways to homeownership of young people in Hong Kong, Journal of Housing Policy, 16(2), pp. 223–242.
  • Charmes, E. & Keil, R. (2015) The politics of post-suburban densification in Canada and France, International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, 39(3), pp. 581–602.
  • Clapham, D. (2002) Housing pathways: a post modern analytical framework, Housing, Theory and Society, 19(2), pp. 57–68.
  • Clapham, D., Mackie, P., Orford, S., Thomas, I. & Buckley, K. (2014) The housing pathways of young people in the UK, Environment and Planning A, 46(8), pp. 2016–2031.
  • Cole, I., Powell, R. & Sanderson, E. (2016) Putting the squeeze on ‘Generation Rent’: Housing benefit claimants in the private rented sector-transitions, marginality and stigmatisation, Sociological Research Online, 21(2), pp. 1–14.
  • Colic-Peisker, V. & Johnson, G. (2012) Liquid life, solid homes: young people, class and homeownership in Australia, Sociology, 46(4), pp. 728–743.
  • Cook, N., Taylor, E. & Hurley, J. (2013) At home with strategic planning: reconciling resident attachments to home with policies of residential densification, Australian Planner, 50(2), pp. 130–137.
  • Davison, A. (2006) Stuck in a cul-de-sac? Suburban history and urban sustainability in Australia, Urban Policy and Research, 24(2), pp. 201–216.
  • Davison, G. (2015) Lost Relations: Fortunes of My Family in Australia's Golden Age (Sydney: Allen & Unwin).
  • Eaqub, S., & Eaqub, S. (2015) Generation Rent: Rethinking New Zealand's Priorities (Wellington: Bridget Williams Books).
  • Easthope, H. & Tice, A. (2011) Children in apartments: Implications for the compact city, Urban Policy and Research, 29(4), pp. 415–434.
  • Feijten, P., Hooimeijer, P. & Mulder, C. H. (2008) Residential experience and residential environment choice over the life-course, Urban Studies, 45(1), pp. 141–162.
  • Fereday, J. & Muir-Cochrane, E. (2006) Demonstrating rigor using thematic analysis: A hybrid approach of inductive and deductive coding and theme development, International Journal of Qualitative Methods, 5(1), pp. 80–92.
  • Ferguson, G. (1994) Building the New Zealand Dream (Palmerston North: Dunmore Press).
  • Fernandez, R. & Aalbers, M. B. (2017) Housing and capital in the Twenty-first Century: Realigning housing studies and political economy, Housing, Theory and Society, 34(2), pp. 151–158.
  • Filion, P., Bunting, T. & Warriner, K. (1999) The entrenchment of urban dispersion: Residential preferences and location patterns in the dispersed city, Urban Studies, 36(8), pp. 1317–1347.
  • Frank, L. D., Andresen, M. A. & Schmid, T. L. (2004) Obesity relationships with community design, physical activity, and time spent in cars, American Journal of Preventive Medicine, 27(2), 87–96.
  • Garikapati, V. M., Pendyala, R. M., Morris, E. A., Mokhtarian, P. L. & McDonald, N. (2016) Activity patterns, time use, and travel of millennials: a generation in transition?, Transport Reviews, 36(5), pp. 558–584.
  • Goodwin, P. & Van Dender, K. (2013) ‘Peak car’: Themes and issues, Transport Reviews, 33(3), pp. 243–254.
  • Haarhoff, E., Beattie, L., Dixon, J., Dupuis, A., Lysnar, P. & Murphy, L. (2012) Future Intensive: Insights for Auckland's Housing (Auckland: Transforming Cities).
  • Haarhoff, E., Beattie, L. & Dupuis, A. (2016) Does higher density housing enhance liveability? Case studies of housing intensification in Auckland, Cogent Social Sciences, 2(1), 1–16.
  • Hastings, A. (2004) Stigma and social housing estates: Beyond pathological explanations, Journal of Housing and the Built Environment, 19(3), pp. 233–254.
  • Hoolachan, J., McKee, K., Moore, T. & Soaita, A. M. (2017) ‘Generation rent’ and the ability to ‘settle down’: economic and geographical variation in young people’s housing transitions, Journal of Youth Studies, 20(1), pp. 63–78.
  • Hopkins, D. (2017) Destabilising automobility? The emergent mobilities of generation Y, Ambio, 46(3), pp. 371–383.
  • Hopkins, D. & Stephenson, J. (2016) The replication and reduction of automobility: Findings from Aotearoa New Zealand, Journal of Transport Geography, 56, pp. 92–101.
  • Howden-Chapman, P. (2015) Home Truths: Confronting New Zealand’s Housing Crisis (Wellington: Bridget Williams Books).
  • Humphreys, J. & Ahern, A. (2019) Is travel based residential self-selection a significant influence in modal choice and household location decisions? Transport Policy, 75, pp. 150–160.
  • Hurley, J., Taylor, E. & Dodson, J. (2017) Getting dense: why has urban consolidation ben so difficult? in: N. Sipe & Vella, K. (Eds) The Routledge Handbook of Australian Urban and Regional Planning (New York, NY: Routledge).
  • Jenks, M. (2013) The acceptability of urban intensification, in: E. Burton, M. Jenks, & K. Williams (Eds) Achieving Sustainable Urban Form, pp. 242–251 (Hoboken, NJ: Taylor and Francis).
  • Johnson, C., Baker, T. & Collins, F. L. (2018) Imaginations of post-suburbia: suburban change and imaginative practices in Auckland, New Zealand, Urban Studies. doi: 10.1177/0042098018787157
  • Krueger, R. & Gibbs, D. (2008) “Third wave” sustainability? Smart growth and regional development in the USA, Regional Studies, 42(9), pp. 1263–1274.
  • Lewis, P. G. & Baldassare, M. (2010) The complexity of public attitudes toward compact development: Survey evidence from five states, Journal of the American Planning Association, 76(2), pp. 219–237.
  • Madden, D. & Marcuse, P. (2016) In Defence of Housing (New York, NY: Verso).
  • Mattingly, K. & Morrissey, J. (2014) Housing and transport expenditure: socio-spatial indicators of affordability in Auckland, Cities, 38, pp. 69–83.
  • Mavoa, S., Witten, K., McCreanor, T. & O’sullivan, D. (2012) GIS based destination accessibility via public transit and walking in Auckland, New Zealand, Journal of Transport Geography, 20(1), pp. 15–22.
  • McDonald, N. C. (2015) Are millennials really the “go-nowhere” generation? Journal of the American Planning Association, 81(2), pp. 90–103.
  • McKee, K. (2012) Young people, homeownership and future welfare, Housing Studies, 27(6), pp. 853–862.
  • Melia, S., Chatterjee, K. & Stokes, G. (2018) Is the urbanisation of young adults reducing their driving? Transportation Research Part A: Policy and Practice, 118, pp. 444–456.
  • Merlo, R. & McDonald, P. (2002) Outcomes of Home Ownership Aspirations and their Determinants. AHURI Final Report No. 9. Melbourne: Australian Housing and Urban Research Institute Limited.
  • Moos, M. (2014) “Generationed” space: societal restructuring and young adults’ changing residential location patterns, The Canadian Geographer, 58(1), pp. 11–33.
  • Moos, M. (2016) From gentrification to youthification? The increasing importance of young age in delineating high-density living, Urban Studies, 54(14), pp. 2903–2920.
  • Moos, M., Revington, N., Wilkin, T. & Andrey, J. (2018) The knowledge economy city: gentrification, studentification and youthification, and their connections to universities, Urban Sudies, pp. 1–18. doi: 10.1177/0042098017745235
  • Mulder, C. H. & Billari, F. C. (2010) Homeownership regimes and low fertility, Housing Studies, 25(4), pp. 527–541.
  • Murphy, L. (2016) The politics of land supply and affordable housing: Auckland's Housing Accord and Special Housing Areas, Urban Studies, 53(12), pp. 2530–2547.
  • Murphy, L. & Rehm, M. (2016) Homeownership, asset-based welfare and the actuarial subject: Exploring the dynamics of ageing and homeownership in New Zealand, in: N. Cook, A. Davison, & L. Crabtree (Eds) Housing and Home Unbound. Intersections in Economics, Environment and Politics in Australia, pp. 39–55 (London, UK: Routledge).
  • Murray, S. J., Walton, D. & Thomas, J. A. (2010) Attitudes towards public transport in New Zealand, Transportation, 37(6), pp. 915–929.
  • Neuman, M. (2005) The compact city fallacy, Journal of Planning Education and Research, 25(1), pp. 11–26.
  • Newman, P. & Kenworthy, J. (2011) ‘Peak car use’: Understanding the demise of automobile dependence, World Transport Policy & Practice, 17(2), pp. 31–42.
  • Piketty, T. (2014) Capital in the Twenty-First Century (Cambridge and London: Harvard University Press).
  • Pleffer, A. (2007) The Houseless Generation (Brisbane: McCrindle Research).
  • Preval, N., Chapman, R. & Howden-Chapman, P. (2010) For whom the city? Housing and locational preferences in New Zealand, in: P. Howden-Chapman, K. Stuart & R. Chapman (Eds) Sizing Up the City: Urban Form and Transport in New Zealand, pp. 34–51 (Wellington: Steele Roberts Publishers).
  • Revington, N. (2018) Pathways and processes: reviewing the role of young adults in urban structure, The Professional Geographer, 70(1), pp. 1–10.
  • Roberts, S. (2013) Youth studies, housing transitions and the "missing middle": time for a rethink?, Sociological Research Online, 18(3), pp. 1–12.
  • Rogers, D. & Koh, S.Y. (2017) The globalisation of real estate: the politics and practice of foreign real estate investment, International Journal of Housing Policy, 17(1), pp. 1–14.
  • Ruming, K. J. (2014) Urban consolidation, strategic planning and community opposition in Sydney, Australia: Unpacking policy knowledge and public perceptions, Land Use Policy, 39, pp. 254–265.
  • Saelens, B. E., Sallis, J. F., Black, J. B. & Chen, D. (2003) Neighborhood-based differences in physical activity: An environment scale evaluation, American Journal of Public Health, 93(9), pp. 1552–1558.
  • Sheller, M. & Urry, J. (2000) The city and the car, International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, 24(4), pp. 737–757.
  • Simons, D., Clarys, P., De Bourdeaudhuij, I., de Geus, B., Vandelanotte, C. & Deforche, B. (2014) Why do young adults choose different transport modes? A focus group study, Transport Policy, 36, pp. 151–159.
  • Statistics New Zealand. (2013) Statistics New Zealand Census 2013 (Wellington: New Zealand Government).
  • Stebbing, A. & Spies-Butcher, B. (2016) The decline of a homeowning society? Asset-based welfare, retirement and intergenerational equity in Australia, Housing Studies, 31(2), pp. 190–207.
  • Thomas, M. (2009) Totally devo: Generation Y and housing, Carpe Diem: The Australian Journal of Business and Informatics, 4(1). Available at https://resource.acu.edu.au/carpediem/pages/volume4/vol4no1_paper1.htm
  • Walker, J. L. & Li, J. (2007) Latent lifestyle preferences and household location decisions, Journal of Geographical Systems, 9(1), pp. 77–101.
  • Walks, A. (2014) Canada's housing bubble story: Mortgage securitization, the state, and the global financial crisis, International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, 38(1), pp. 256–284.
  • Warde, A. (1994) Consumption, identity-formation and uncertainty, Sociology, 28(4), pp. 877–898.
  • Winstanley, A., Thorns, D. C. & Perkins, H. C. (2002) Moving house, creating home: Exploring residential mobility, Housing Studies, 17(6), pp. 813–832.
  • Woodcock, I., Dovey, K., Wollan, S. & Robertson, I. (2011) Speculation and resistance: constraints on compact city policy implementation in Melbourne, Urban Policy and Research, 29(4), pp. 343–362.
  • Yates, J. (2016) Why does Australia have an affordable housing problem and what can be done about it?, Australian Economic Review, 49(3), pp. 328–339.
  • Yeoman, R. & Akehurst, G. (2015) The Housing we’d Choose: A Study of Housing Preferences, Choices and Trade-Offs in Auckland (Auckland: Market Economics Ltd for Auckland Council).

Reprints and Corporate Permissions

Please note: Selecting permissions does not provide access to the full text of the article, please see our help page How do I view content?

To request a reprint or corporate permissions for this article, please click on the relevant link below:

Academic Permissions

Please note: Selecting permissions does not provide access to the full text of the article, please see our help page How do I view content?

Obtain permissions instantly via Rightslink by clicking on the button below:

If you are unable to obtain permissions via Rightslink, please complete and submit this Permissions form. For more information, please visit our Permissions help page.