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Socioekonomie bydlení

Sociologický ústav AV ČR, v.v.i.

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Diversity

Housing means different styles, ideas and opportunities

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Knowledge

Basic and applied research

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Opinion

Quantitative and qualitative sociological research methods

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Housing markets

House price indices, booms and busts, fundamental factors

 
 

Publications

We published, edited or co-edited 13 books, 3 of them for international audience. We published more than 50 articles in peer-reviewed journals, more than 30 articles in international journals.

 

Grant projects

We were leaders or participated in solution of more than 15 grant projects, 5 of them were international projects. The outcomes (results) of most of the projects were evaluated as "outstanding". Martin Lux received in 2012 the Award of the Chair of the Czech Science Foundation for outstanding results of the project "Social Inequalities and the Market Risks Following from Housing Consumption. The Real and Desirable Response of State Fiscal and Monetary Policies".

 

Conferences and surveys

We organized or co-organized 4 international conferences, the European Network for Housing Research 2009 conference beeing the most important one. We conducted 2 representative national housing attitudes surveys any many more smaller surveys as a part of projects' solutions.

 

private rental housing 2017 thumbHegedüs, J., M. Lux, V. Horváth (eds.) 2017. Private Rental Housing in Transition Countries. London: Palgrave Macmillan.

Martin Lux is co-author and co-editor of the book.

The book is available in the Palgrave Macmillan e-shop.

This book presents an overview of private rented housing in selected new EU member states and other transition countries – a topic scarcely researched to date, as it is largely part of the informal economy, and consequently often invisible to official statistics. Part I presents the private rented sector in Western and Northern European countries, the history of private renting under socialism in Central and Eastern Europe, and thematic issues such as restitution and marginalized groups depending on privately rented housing. Part II provides a series of country case studies from the Central and East European region. Part III concludes with chapters on the possibility of utilizing the private rental sector in affordable housing provision through good practices in both old and new EU member states, and sets out to further the housing policy debate on European housing regimes. This unique edited collection will be of great value to scholars of and practitioners involved in housing policy and economics, urban development, international relations, politics, economics and sociology.