An example of conducting literature review tasks on housing regime: for Housing Studies students
This note
is based on an analysis of the following article: Dewilde, C. (2017)“Do housing
regimes matter? Assessing the concept of housing regimes through configurations
of housing outcomes” International Journal of Social Welfare 26:
384-404.
What are the main
research objectives and research questions of this article?
The main research objectives of the article are to assess
the concept of "housing regimes" by investigating whether distinct
configurations of housing outcomes for low-to-moderate income owners and
renters can be identified across European countries. The study aims to move
beyond traditional approaches that rely on country-level institutional
indicators and aggregate housing outcomes by developing a more theoretically
informed operationalization of housing outcomes based on de-commodification in
housing — i.e., how housing policies correct market failures and assist
households in realizing their right to housing.
The key research questions involve:
1.
Do housing regimes matter? Specifically, can patterned
housing outcomes (configurations) be observed that correspond to differences in
housing regimes across countries?
2.
To what extent do configurations of housing outcomes
reflect hypothesized differences between distinct housing regimes in terms of
country groupings and housing system indicators, despite the limited nature of
such institutional indicators?
3.
How do factors such as age groups (young versus elderly),
tenure types (owners versus renters), and income levels (low-to-moderate income)
relate to these housing outcome configurations?
4.
How have housing outcomes and the relevance of housing
regimes changed over time, specifically comparing data from 1995 (before or at
the onset of liberalization) and 2012 (post-housing crisis and economic
crisis)?
The article uses cluster analysis on micro-level data
from the European Community Household Panel and EU-Statistics on Income and
Living Conditions to investigate these questions and validate the concept of
housing regimes through empirical housing outcomes.
Does the literature review of the article involve the
following review tasks:
1.
Defining, evaluating and extending the relevant academic
ideas.
2.
Updating the readers on the latest academic development
as related to the article's research theme.
3.
Examining the research issues as related to: (1) the
relevant theories, perspectives and concepts and (2) the relevant research
methods employed to study the related research topics and themes.
4.
Synthesize the relevant academic ideas to come up with a
more comprehensive research framework or theories.
5.
Discuss how some of the relevant theories and concepts
can be employed to inform the research methodology (and research methods) for
this study.
Based on the content of the article "Do housing
regimes matter? Assessing the concept of housing regimes through configurations
of housing outcomes," the literature review performs several of the review
tasks you outlined:
1.
Defining, evaluating and
extending the relevant academic ideas: The
article defines the concept of housing regimes, explaining its origins related
to de-commodification and social production of housing. It evaluates the
existing housing regimes literature, noting their limitations (e.g., being
sometimes erroneously portrayed as static, difficulty capturing regimes
quantitatively). The article extends the discussions by proposing an empirical
assessment of housing regimes via configurations of housing outcomes, rather
than only institutional indicators or aggregate statistics.
2.
Updating the readers on the latest
academic development as related to the article's research theme:
The article references recent studies linking housing regimes to outcomes,
points out emerging streams of literature seeking to cross-link housing regimes
and outcomes, and identifies gaps (e.g., previous studies often use only
country-level indicators or focus on single housing dimensions). It integrates
recent empirical findings such as those on Eastern European housing legacies
and distinctions between Southern and Northern Europe housing systems.
3.
Examining the research issues as
related to: (1) the relevant theories, perspectives and concepts and (2) the
relevant research methods employed to study the related research topics and
themes: The review discusses relevant theories on welfare state
regimes, the social production of housing, and de-commodification. It also
discusses the challenges of studying housing regimes quantitatively, noting
complexities in qualifying and quantifying housing policies compared to income
replacement policies. This sets the stage for the methodology employed (cluster
analysis of micro-data on housing outcomes).
4.
Synthesizing the relevant
academic ideas to come up with a more comprehensive research framework or
theories: By combining ideas on welfare regimes, housing
production (state, market, family roles), and de-commodification, the study
synthesizes a framework that views housing regimes as shaped by ideological
principles and power relationships and links these to multidimensional housing
outcomes. This provides a more nuanced approach to operationalizing housing
regimes in comparative quantitative research.
5.
Discussing how some of the
relevant theories and concepts can be employed to inform the research
methodology (and research methods) for this study:
The article explicitly relates the concept of de-commodification in housing to
the operationalization of its indicators for cluster analysis, explaining why
micro-level outcome data across tenure-age groups for low-to-moderate income
groups are used rather than country-level policy indicators. The theoretical
underpinnings justify the choice of cluster analysis to empirically assess
patterned housing outcomes as an expression of housing regimes.
Summary:
The article’s literature review performs all five tasks you listed. It
carefully defines and evaluates key academic ideas on housing regimes and
welfare state theory, updates readers on recent research developments, examines
relevant theories and methodological challenges, synthesizes these ideas into a
coherent framework of housing regime de-commodification, and uses this
framework to inform the study’s quantitative methodological choices.
Overall, is the
literature review of the study clearly research objectives-driven?
Yes, the literature review in this study is clearly
driven by the research objectives.
Evidence supporting this includes:
·
The review systematically defines and critiques the
concept of housing regimes in relation to the study's core objective of
assessing whether housing regimes "matter" empirically through
configurations of housing outcomes.
·
It highlights specific gaps and challenges in existing
research—such as the difficulty of quantifying housing regimes and the
overreliance on limited country-level indicators—linking these directly to the
need for the study's alternative approach using micro-level housing outcomes
and cluster analysis.
·
The review consistently frames theoretical discussions
(e.g., de-commodification, roles of state, market, and family) in alignment
with the study’s aims to operationalize and test housing regimes via
data-driven outcome patterns.
·
It sets up the hypotheses and methodology logically,
presenting the review as a foundation for the research questions and empirical
strategy, showing that the literature synthesis is purposefully intended to
guide and justify the study's specific objectives and design.
In short, the literature review is structured and
articulated in a manner that is tightly connected to, and motivated by, the
research objectives of the study rather than being a general or descriptive
overview.
No comments:
Post a Comment