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England: regulation of alternative and intermediary tenures in England

England: regulation of alternative and intermediary tenures in England
England: regulation of alternative and intermediary tenures in England
The British report outlines and evaluates alternative and intermediate tenures in the English housing system. The chapter begins by locating these tenures in the wider housing system and then outlines how English land law facilitates a range of different tenure models. These models are categorised into the rent minus/plus, ownership minus/plus typology used within this book in order to enable comparison. The final section explains two of the more significant, and internationally distinctive, forms of AIT comprising leasehold and shared ownership. The chapter critically evaluates the role of these forms of tenure and outlines how their legal flaws are tolerated or overlooked because of political and ideological reasons associated with expanding rates of ownership. The chapter concludes that these tenures offer limited potential for addressing the English housing crisis.
Regulation of tenure, housing law, renting
139-160
Edward Elgar Publishing
Jordan, Mark
e558a744-84d8-405d-b453-f63cefa70b78
Schmid, Christoph U.
Jordan, Mark
e558a744-84d8-405d-b453-f63cefa70b78
Schmid, Christoph U.

Jordan, Mark (2022) England: regulation of alternative and intermediary tenures in England. In, Schmid, Christoph U. (ed.) Ways out of the European Housing Crisis: Tenure Innovation and Diversification in Comparative Perspective. Cheltenham. Edward Elgar Publishing, pp. 139-160. (doi:10.4337/9781800377448).

Record type: Book Section

Abstract

The British report outlines and evaluates alternative and intermediate tenures in the English housing system. The chapter begins by locating these tenures in the wider housing system and then outlines how English land law facilitates a range of different tenure models. These models are categorised into the rent minus/plus, ownership minus/plus typology used within this book in order to enable comparison. The final section explains two of the more significant, and internationally distinctive, forms of AIT comprising leasehold and shared ownership. The chapter critically evaluates the role of these forms of tenure and outlines how their legal flaws are tolerated or overlooked because of political and ideological reasons associated with expanding rates of ownership. The chapter concludes that these tenures offer limited potential for addressing the English housing crisis.

Text
England Alternative and Intermediate Tenures Chapter – England revised 25 June - Author's Original
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Published date: 15 July 2022
Keywords: Regulation of tenure, housing law, renting

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 472962
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/472962
PURE UUID: b6e48b31-225c-4878-a267-9104f1febdd2
ORCID for Mark Jordan: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-1901-1255

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Date deposited: 06 Jan 2023 13:46
Last modified: 06 Jun 2024 01:51

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Contributors

Author: Mark Jordan ORCID iD
Editor: Christoph U. Schmid

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