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Housing or property? The dynamics of housing policy and property principles in the right to buy

Housing or property? The dynamics of housing policy and property principles in the right to buy
Housing or property? The dynamics of housing policy and property principles in the right to buy
This paper examines the interplay and tension between housing law and policy and property law, in the specific context of the right to buy (RTB). It focuses on funding arrangements between the RTB tenant and another party. It first examines how courts determine the parties' respective entitlements in the home, highlighting the difficulty of categorising, under traditional property law principles, a contribution in the form of the statutory discount conferred on the RTB tenant. Secondly, it considers possible exploitation of the RTB scheme, both at the macro level of exploitation of the policy underpinning the legislation and, at the micro level, of exploitation of the tenant. The measures contained in the Housing Act 2004 intended to curb exploitation of the RTB are analysed to determine what can be considered to be legitimate and illegitimate uses of the scheme. It is argued that, despite the government's implicit approval, certain funding arrangements by non-resident relatives fail to give effect to the spirit of the scheme.
0261-3875
65-87
Hopkins, Nicholas
275e4580-220b-40e1-bb31-8180a9601736
Laurie, Emma
c1dd220c-d784-4d82-a3ae-c6cdedd48a18
Hopkins, Nicholas
275e4580-220b-40e1-bb31-8180a9601736
Laurie, Emma
c1dd220c-d784-4d82-a3ae-c6cdedd48a18

Hopkins, Nicholas and Laurie, Emma (2006) Housing or property? The dynamics of housing policy and property principles in the right to buy. Legal Studies, 26 (1), 65-87. (doi:10.1111/j.1748-121X.2006.00002.x).

Record type: Article

Abstract

This paper examines the interplay and tension between housing law and policy and property law, in the specific context of the right to buy (RTB). It focuses on funding arrangements between the RTB tenant and another party. It first examines how courts determine the parties' respective entitlements in the home, highlighting the difficulty of categorising, under traditional property law principles, a contribution in the form of the statutory discount conferred on the RTB tenant. Secondly, it considers possible exploitation of the RTB scheme, both at the macro level of exploitation of the policy underpinning the legislation and, at the micro level, of exploitation of the tenant. The measures contained in the Housing Act 2004 intended to curb exploitation of the RTB are analysed to determine what can be considered to be legitimate and illegitimate uses of the scheme. It is argued that, despite the government's implicit approval, certain funding arrangements by non-resident relatives fail to give effect to the spirit of the scheme.

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Published date: March 2006

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 27926
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/27926
ISSN: 0261-3875
PURE UUID: f21d302e-5103-44e6-ad7e-5281ead7a43e
ORCID for Emma Laurie: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-2178-1593

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Date deposited: 17 May 2006
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 03:03

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Contributors

Author: Nicholas Hopkins
Author: Emma Laurie ORCID iD

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