Saturday, 2 May 2026

A note of concept-decomposing on housing regime: for Housing Studies students

A note of concept-decomposing on housing regime: for Housing Studies students


Highlight 6 main ideas on Jim Kemeny's concept of the housing regime and describe 2 main claims of it in terms of Toulmin's model of arguments

Jim Kemeny's housing regime concept analyzes housing systems through their rental market structures and links to broader welfare and power dynamics. It contrasts dualist and unitary models to explain divergent housing policies across nations.

Main Ideas

·                  Housing regimes form the social, political, and economic systems governing housing supply, distribution, and consumption in a specific period and place.

·                  Key distinction lies in rental markets: dualist regimes separate profit-driven private renting (unregulated) from subsidized non-profit renting (heavily regulated), marginalizing the latter.

·                  Unitary regimes integrate profit and non-profit renting under shared regulations, allowing competition that makes renting viable across income levels.

·                  Regimes emerge from power balances in corporatist systems—employer-union-government negotiations—shaping policy paths toward homeownership dominance or rental strength.

·                  Housing embeds deeply in welfare regimes as a "fourth pillar," where non-decisions favoring ownership reinforce privatist cultures, while strong renting supports decommodification.

·                  Divergence, not convergence, characterizes regimes; they are strategic social constructions influenced by historical trajectories like subsidy maturation in non-profit sectors.

Toulmin Claims

Claim 1: Dualist Regimes Promote Homeownership Dominance

·                  Claim: Societies with dualist rental markets foster homeownership over competitive renting.

·                  Grounds: Profit renting remains unregulated while non-profit is residualized as "poorhouse" housing for the marginalized.

·                  Warrant: This separation stems from liberal policies prioritizing markets, insulating sectors and weakening rental alternatives.

Claim 2: Corporatism Drives Unitary Regimes

·                  Claim: Corporatist power balances produce unitary rental markets competitive with ownership.

·                  Grounds: Non-profit sectors influence, lead, or dominate under shared rules, retaining middle-class tenants (e.g., Germany, Sweden).

·                  Warrant: Tripartite negotiations enable subsidy retention and market integration, countering ownership bias.

 

Try to illustrate the 6 ideas with reference to the Housing Studies research theme of "An analysis of the housing regime of Hong Kong, notably on the governance of its housing supply over the past 20 years".

Hong Kong's housing regime over the past 20 years (2006–2026) exemplifies a dualist structure dominated by private market forces and public rental residualization, amid chronic supply shortages and governance challenges like land auctions and developer influence. This aligns with Kemeny's framework, promoting homeownership aspirations while marginalizing rental options.

Idea 1: Housing Regimes as Systems

Hong Kong's regime integrates governance via land sales auctions (generating major revenue), public rental housing (PRH) for ~30% of population, and private developer-led supply. Over 20 years, policies like Long Term Housing Strategy (LTHS, 2014) targeted 440,000 units (2025/26–2034/35) with 70:30 public-private split, but chronic shortfalls persist due to land scarcity.

Idea 2: Dualist Rental Markets

Private profit renting thrives unregulated, while PRH is heavily subsidized/residualized for low-income (waiting time ~5.3–6 years, 116,400 applicants). Subdivided units (SDUs, ~100,900 units housing 226,300 people) serve as unregulated "poorhouse" for overflow, with recent tenancy controls (2022) and Basic Housing Units regime (2026) attempting regulation without integration.

Idea 3: Unitary Rental Markets

No unitary model in Hong Kong; PRH/non-profit remains segregated from private market, lacking shared regulations for competition. Private sector dominates (~1.66M units), with small "nano-flats" rising (3.6% of 2017–2021 completions), blocking middle-class rental viability.

Idea 4: Power Balances in Corporatism

Absent tripartite corporatism; governance relies on bureaucratic decisions and developer lobbying ("land monopoly") rather than employer-union negotiations. Policies like Home Ownership Scheme (HOS) suspensions (e.g., 2003–2014) and LTHS reflect state-private alliances favoring ownership subsidies over rental strength.

Idea 5: Embedding in Welfare Regimes

Housing as "fourth pillar" is privatized; high home purchase affordability index (74% in 2021) and falling ownership (48.6% in 2021 from 52.1% in 2011) show ownership bias, with PRH as welfare safety net amid inequality. Supply volatility (e.g., 173,900 completions 2017–2021 but PRH decline) reinforces commodification.

Idea 6: Divergence and Historical Trajectories

Regime diverges toward liberal dualism, not converging to unitary; post-2003 HOS halt and 70:30 split prioritized private supply, entrenching developer dominance despite efforts like Northern Metropolis. 20-year governance shows "non-decisions" like land auction reliance perpetuating shortages.

 

References

Kemeny, J. (2006) 'Corporatism and housing regimes', Housing, Theory and Society, 23(1), pp. 1–16. doi:10.1080/14036090500476543.

Forrest, R. and Murie, A. (1990) Selling the welfare state: The privatisation of council housing, London: Routledge.

Note: These are core theoretical works; for Hong Kong-specific, see Chan, E.Y.Y. and Chan, J.K.L. (2004) 'From intervention to privatization: The changing public housing policy in Hong Kong', International Journal of Construction Management, 4(1), pp. 57–73.

 

** theory-decomposing is a literature review technique.



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An example of conducting literature review tasks on housing regime: for Housing Studies students

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.

 


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Friday, 1 May 2026

A collection of blog notes on examples of literature review tasks in MBA dissertation report writing

A collection of blog notes on examples of literature review tasks in MBA dissertation report writing


1. Related to talent management

2. Related to customer engagement


An example of conducting literature review tasks on customer engagement strategies: for MBA students

An example of conducting literature review tasks on customer engagement strategies: for MBA students


A review of the academic article of: Lisa Lundin (2025) Customer engagement strategies for digital offerings: An empirical study of
B2B suppliersIndustrial Marketing Management  131: 46-57

What are the main research objectives and research questions of this article?

The main research objectives of the article "Customer engagement strategies for digital offerings: An empirical study of B2B suppliers" are to explore and identify customer engagement strategies specifically for B2B suppliers of digital offerings, and to extend the current understanding of how these suppliers can increase customer engagement in digital contexts.

Specifically, the article aims to:

·        Address gaps in existing literature by focusing on digital offerings themselves as engagement objects, rather than just firms or brands.

·        Investigate how suppliers can stimulate customer engagement both directly and indirectly in digital B2B settings.

·        Provide a process-based understanding of customer engagement, incorporating both customer dispositions (willingness to engage) and engagement activities (resource contributions).

·        Develop practical guidance for suppliers on how to combine different engagement strategies considering firm-related and contextual factors.

The research questions implied by these objectives are:

1.    How can B2B suppliers of digital offerings increase customer engagement?

2.    What distinct customer engagement strategies do suppliers use to stimulate customer engagement dispositions and activities directly and indirectly?

3.    How does the nature of digital offerings as new engagement objects influence the customer engagement process?

4.    How can suppliers manage customer engagement in digital contexts, particularly post-purchase and through interactions with the offering itself?

These objectives and questions are reflected throughout the article's introduction and theoretical background sections, which emphasize the need to explore supplier-initiated activities that affect customer engagement in digital B2B markets

 

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 in the article's theoretical background and introduction sections, the literature review performs the following review tasks:

1.    Defining, evaluating and extending relevant academic ideas: Yes. The article defines digital offerings and customer engagement concepts clearly, including dispositions and activities as dimensions of engagement. It critically evaluates existing customer engagement literature, highlighting gaps such as the under-theorization of digital offerings as engagement objects and limited focus on process-based views. It extends these ideas by introducing new customer engagement strategies specific to digital B2B suppliers.

2.    Updating the readers on the latest academic developments related to the research theme: Yes. The article references recent studies (e.g., works from 2019 to 2024), showing awareness of current research on digital offerings, customer engagement in digital contexts, and supplier-initiated engagement strategies. It situates its contribution in the context of emerging academic interest in digital B2B marketing and engagement processes.

3.    Examining research issues related to theories, perspectives, concepts and research methods: Partially. The article primarily examines relevant theories and concepts including customer engagement dimensions (dispositions vs. activities), engagement objects, and supplier-initiated strategies. While it discusses these well, the discussion of research methods in the literature review is limited. The paper does mention different perspectives on customer engagement and highlights the need for process-based understandings, but less focus is placed on reviewing research methods from previous studies explicitly.

4.    Synthesizing relevant academic ideas into a more comprehensive research framework or theories: Yes. The literature review synthesizes existing concepts into a conceptual framing based on two dimensions (customer engagement dispositions vs. activities) and modes of stimulating engagement (direct vs. indirect). This synthesis leads to the identification of four distinct customer engagement strategies, thus providing a more comprehensive framework for understanding engagement in digital B2B contexts.

5.    Discussing how theories and concepts inform the research methodology and methods for this study: Not explicitly in the literature review. While the article’s broader methodology section references theoretical framing guiding data collection and analysis (e.g., abductive approach based on engagement theory), the literature review itself does not explicitly discuss how the reviewed theories inform the research methodology or methods. Instead, this is covered later in the methodology section.

In summary, the literature review fulfills tasks 1, 2, and 4 prominently, partially addresses task 3 regarding theoretical perspectives but less on methods, and does not explicitly fulfill task 5 within the literature review itself.

Overall, is the literature review of the study clearly research objectives-driven?

Yes, overall the literature review of the study is clearly research objectives-driven.

The review systematically identifies key gaps and limitations in the current customer engagement literature—such as the under-theorization of digital offerings as engagement objects, the limited focus on purely digital B2B contexts, and the need for a process-based understanding of engagement rather than just outcomes. These identified gaps directly motivate the study’s objective to explore customer engagement strategies for suppliers of digital offerings.

Moreover, the literature review frames key theoretical concepts (e.g., engagement dispositions vs. activities, direct vs. indirect stimulation) that underpin the study’s conceptual framework and guide the empirical investigation. This alignment demonstrates that the review is not merely descriptive but purposefully structured to inform and advance the specific research aims.

Therefore, the literature review effectively supports and drives the research objectives by defining the problem space, highlighting existing research shortcomings, and synthesizing concepts that lead to the study’s exploration of distinct engagement strategies in digital B2B settings.



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An example of conducting literature review tasks on talent management: for MBA students

An example of conducting literature review tasks on talent management: for MBA students

A review of the academic article of: Heike Schinnenburg  (2025) Re-focusing talent management: Frontline and essential work as the contemporary challengeHuman Resource Management Review 35: 101090

What are the main research objectives and research questions of this article?

The main research objectives of the article are:

1.    To critically examine the mainstream Talent Management (TM) discourse, highlighting significant doubts about the traditional focus on top talent and knowledge workers, and to bring attention to the largely overlooked group of frontline and essential workers (FEWs), including many migrants, in TM research.

2.    To explore major societal phenomena and trends—such as demographic shifts, education policies, migration, and Artificial Intelligence (AI)—that impact HRM and TM in Western countries, with a focus on Germany as a case example. The authors aim to investigate how context-specific and company-specific TM programs are emerging for employees outside the typical exclusive TM target groups.

3.    To develop key research implications and propose a more future-oriented and inclusive TM framework that better reflects diverse workforce realities and guides future research in the area of TM involving FEWs.

These objectives implicitly address the following research questions:

  • How adequate is the traditional focus of TM on high potentials and knowledge workers in light of emerging societal and labor market challenges?
  • What role do frontline and essential workers play in organizational capability and talent pools, and how can TM practices better include this group?
  • How do megatrends such as demographic changes, migration, and AI shape the future of TM, especially for FEWs?
  • What are effective TM practices and frameworks to support a more inclusive and future-oriented approach to managing a diverse workforce?

 

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.

 

Yes, the literature review in this article includes several of these review tasks, as detailed below:

1.    Defining, evaluating and extending the relevant academic ideas: The article defines Talent Management (TM) concepts, such as strategic TM, workforce differentiation, and inclusive TM, quoting key definitions (e.g., Collings & Mellahi, 2009; Lepak & Snell, 2002). It evaluates mainstream TM research focused on knowledge workers and high potentials and critiques this exclusive approach. The authors extend the discussion by highlighting overlooked groups like frontline and essential workers (FEWs) and migrants in TM research, thereby broadening the traditional TM discourse.

2.    Updating the readers on the latest academic development related to the article's research theme: The review discusses recent developments such as the impact of COVID-19 on HR practices, the rise of digitalization and AI in TM, and contemporary calls for inclusive TM approaches. It also cites very recent studies on AI in HRM and the challenges associated with managing FEWs and migrants, showing awareness of current academic debates.

3.    Examining the research issues as related to: (1) relevant theories, perspectives, and concepts and (2) relevant research methods employed: The authors analyze relevant theories such as the Resource-Based View (RBV), workforce differentiation, and paradox perspectives in TM. They also consider cultural, institutional, and contextual influences on TM practices. While the literature review primarily focuses on theoretical and conceptual issues, it references empirical research methods like case studies and interview-based research as common approaches in studying TM and HRM practices.

4.    Synthesizing the relevant academic ideas to come up with a more comprehensive research framework or theories: A key contribution is the development of a future-oriented inclusive TM framework that integrates insights from RBV, workforce differentiation, and the analysis of megatrends such as migration and AI. This framework is proposed as a more holistic, inclusive approach to TM beyond traditional exclusive talent pools.

5.    Discussing how some of the relevant theories and concepts can be employed to inform the research methodology (and research methods) for this study: While the article discusses the importance of context-specific and case study research, including empirical studies involving HR experts and organizational observations, it does not deeply elaborate on how the theories specifically inform methodological choices. However, it does recommend case study designs and engaging with real-world organizational issues as fruitful research methods to explore TM for FEWs and to bridge theory and practice.

In summary, the literature review addresses tasks (1) through (4) explicitly and partially addresses (5) by suggesting methodological directions aligned with the theoretical framework.

Overall, is the literature review of the study clearly research objectives-driven?

Yes, overall, the literature review of the study is clearly research objectives-driven.

Evidence from the article shows that the review is systematically structured to support the study's aims of re-focusing Talent Management (TM) toward frontline and essential workers (FEWs) in the context of evolving labor markets influenced by demographic shifts, migration, digitalization, and AI. Specifically:

·        The review defines and evaluates existing TM concepts, highlighting the predominant focus on high potentials and knowledge workers and identifying gaps related to FEWs and migrants, which directly aligns with the objective to broaden the TM focus.

·        It critically assesses current exclusive TM paradigms and synthesizes calls for more inclusive approaches, paving the way for proposing a new framework, which corresponds with the authors’ objective of developing a future-oriented, inclusive TM model.

·        By integrating discussions on megatrends such as AI and migration, and foregrounding the limited state of research on FEWs within TM, the literature review sets the foundation for ensuing research directions that the article promotes, showing that the review is purposefully directed at guiding these objectives.

·        The literature review also connects theoretical underpinnings with practical and contextual challenges, thus driving the study’s goal of exploring TM in diverse national contexts with empirical case studies and suggesting research methods.

In sum, the literature review is not a generic summary but strategically focused to inform, justify, and frame the article’s research objectives of broadening TM beyond traditional elites, emphasizing inclusivity, and adapting to contemporary labor market realities.


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