The concept of living arrangements ("Hard-ware" and "soft-ware" conditions in the housing environment) : A study of elderly's living arrangement (1)
0
Citation
0
Reference
10
Related Paper
Cite
Cite
Citations (1)
Cite
Citations (0)
Cite
Citations (0)
Housing affordability problems are exacerbating poverty, particularly for working age households increasingly reliant on private renting, and housing needs have increased, reversing long-standing trends. UK housing still partially insulates the poor from bad housing experience but this tendency is weakening. Fuel poverty has significantly worsened and the poor are 6-10 times more likely to experience its adverse impacts. The poor are also more likely to experience neighbourhood social and other problems.
Neighbourhood (mathematics)
Fuel poverty
Rental housing
Urban Poverty
Cite
Citations (0)
In the United States (US) as in other societies, living arrangements are closely linked to family membership. This chapter traces trends in mortality and fertility which together determine the age composition of the population. It looks at trends in family formation and dissolution, emphasizing the differences in male and female patterns of marriage and marital dissolution. The chapter focuses on the living arrangements of men and women in 1980 in order to evaluate what part of those differences is due to simple differences in demography and what part must be left for other kinds of explanation. It then examines differentials in living arrangements among races or ethnic groups, or among urban and rural residents and considers only the distinctions by gender for the total US population, using primarily published tabulations for the March 1980 Current Population Survey.
Cite
Citations (0)
Journal Article Long-Range Satisfaction with Housing Get access Frances M. Carp, PhD Frances M. Carp, PhD 2The Wright Institute2728 Durant Ave., Berkeley, CA 94704 Search for other works by this author on: Oxford Academic PubMed Google Scholar The Gerontologist, Volume 15, Issue 1_Part_1, February 1975, Pages 68–72, https://doi.org/10.1093/geront/15.1_Part_1.68 Published: 01 February 1975
Wright
Cite
Citations (8)
No abstract available for this article.
Independent living
Assisted Living Facility
Living room
Cite
Citations (3)
Cite
Citations (5)
Click to increase image sizeClick to decrease image size Additional informationNotes on contributorsBruce M. PringleBruce M. Pringle is an associate professor in the Department of Sociology, Southern Methodist University, Dallas, Texas 75275.
Cite
Citations (0)