Housing Cooperatives and Social Capital: The Case of Vienna

Drawing on the case of Vienna, the article examines the role of third sector housing for social cohesion in the city. With the joint examination of an organisational and an institutional level of housing governance, the authors apply an interdisciplinary, multi-level research approach which aims...

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Main Authors: Lang, Richard, Novy, Andreas
Format: Others
Language:en
Published: WU Vienna University of Economics and Business 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://epub.wu.ac.at/3207/1/sre%2Ddisc%2D2011_02.pdf
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spelling ndltd-VIENNA-oai-epub.wu-wien.ac.at-32072018-09-01T05:57:59Z Housing Cooperatives and Social Capital: The Case of Vienna Lang, Richard Novy, Andreas RVK QY 500 social housing / third sector housing / housing cooperatives / social cohesion / social capital / governance / Wien / sozialer Wohnbau / Wohnbaugenossenschaft / Wohnkultur / Gemeinnützigkeit / soziales Kapital Drawing on the case of Vienna, the article examines the role of third sector housing for social cohesion in the city. With the joint examination of an organisational and an institutional level of housing governance, the authors apply an interdisciplinary, multi-level research approach which aims at contributing to a comprehensive understanding of social cohesion as a contextualised phenomenon which requires place-based as well as structural (multi-level) solutions. Using a large-scale household survey and interviews with key informants, the analysis shows an ambiguous role housing cooperatives play for social cohesion: With the practice of "heme-oriented housing estates", non-profit housing returns to the traditional cooperative principle of Gemeinschaft. However, community cooperatives rather promote homogenous membership and thus, encompass the danger to establish cohesive islands that are cut off from the rest of the city. Furthermore, given the solidarity-based housing regime of Vienna, fostering bonding social capital on the neighbourhood level, might anyway just be an additional safeguarding mechanism for social cohesion. More important is the direct link between the micro-level of residents and the macro-level of urban housing policy. In this respect, cooperative housing represents a crucial intermediate level that strengthens the linking social capital of residents and provides opportunity structures for citizen participation. However, the increasing adoption of a corporate management orientation leads to a hollowing out of the cooperative principle of democratic member participation, reducing it to an informal and non-binding substitute. Thus, it is in the responsibility of both managements and residents to revitalise the existing democratic governance structures of cooperative housing before they will be completely dismantled by market liberalization and privatization. In contrast to other European cities, third sector housing in Vienna has the potential to give residents a voice beyond the neighbourhood and the field of housing. WU Vienna University of Economics and Business 2011 Paper NonPeerReviewed en application/pdf http://epub.wu.ac.at/3207/1/sre%2Ddisc%2D2011_02.pdf Series: SRE - Discussion Papers http://epub.wu.ac.at/3207/
collection NDLTD
language en
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic RVK QY 500
social housing / third sector housing / housing cooperatives / social cohesion / social capital / governance / Wien / sozialer Wohnbau / Wohnbaugenossenschaft / Wohnkultur / Gemeinnützigkeit / soziales Kapital
spellingShingle RVK QY 500
social housing / third sector housing / housing cooperatives / social cohesion / social capital / governance / Wien / sozialer Wohnbau / Wohnbaugenossenschaft / Wohnkultur / Gemeinnützigkeit / soziales Kapital
Lang, Richard
Novy, Andreas
Housing Cooperatives and Social Capital: The Case of Vienna
description Drawing on the case of Vienna, the article examines the role of third sector housing for social cohesion in the city. With the joint examination of an organisational and an institutional level of housing governance, the authors apply an interdisciplinary, multi-level research approach which aims at contributing to a comprehensive understanding of social cohesion as a contextualised phenomenon which requires place-based as well as structural (multi-level) solutions. Using a large-scale household survey and interviews with key informants, the analysis shows an ambiguous role housing cooperatives play for social cohesion: With the practice of "heme-oriented housing estates", non-profit housing returns to the traditional cooperative principle of Gemeinschaft. However, community cooperatives rather promote homogenous membership and thus, encompass the danger to establish cohesive islands that are cut off from the rest of the city. Furthermore, given the solidarity-based housing regime of Vienna, fostering bonding social capital on the neighbourhood level, might anyway just be an additional safeguarding mechanism for social cohesion. More important is the direct link between the micro-level of residents and the macro-level of urban housing policy. In this respect, cooperative housing represents a crucial intermediate level that strengthens the linking social capital of residents and provides opportunity structures for citizen participation. However, the increasing adoption of a corporate management orientation leads to a hollowing out of the cooperative principle of democratic member participation, reducing it to an informal and non-binding substitute. Thus, it is in the responsibility of both managements and residents to revitalise the existing democratic governance structures of cooperative housing before they will be completely dismantled by market liberalization and privatization. In contrast to other European cities, third sector housing in Vienna has the potential to give residents a voice beyond the neighbourhood and the field of housing. === Series: SRE - Discussion Papers
author Lang, Richard
Novy, Andreas
author_facet Lang, Richard
Novy, Andreas
author_sort Lang, Richard
title Housing Cooperatives and Social Capital: The Case of Vienna
title_short Housing Cooperatives and Social Capital: The Case of Vienna
title_full Housing Cooperatives and Social Capital: The Case of Vienna
title_fullStr Housing Cooperatives and Social Capital: The Case of Vienna
title_full_unstemmed Housing Cooperatives and Social Capital: The Case of Vienna
title_sort housing cooperatives and social capital: the case of vienna
publisher WU Vienna University of Economics and Business
publishDate 2011
url http://epub.wu.ac.at/3207/1/sre%2Ddisc%2D2011_02.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT langrichard housingcooperativesandsocialcapitalthecaseofvienna
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