Author
Listed:
- Ralph Horne
- Nicola Willand
- Louise Dorignon
- Bhavna Middha
Abstract
COVID-19 policy responses have intensified the use of housing as a spatial and material defence against community spread of infection. In so doing, they have focussed attention upon pre-existing inequalities and the effects of socio-economic management of COVID-19. This paper draws upon individual households’ accounts to explore these effects on housing inequalities, and then adapts a critical resilience framework from disaster response in order to examine the implications for policymaking. The empirical work centres upon a case study of lived experiences of COVID-19-constrained conditions, based on a longitudinal-style study combining semi-structured interviews with 40 households, photographs and household tours at two datapoints (before/during COVID-19) in Victoria, Australia. The study reveals how these households were impacted across four domains: (1) employment, finances, services, and mobilities; (2) homemaking including comfort and energy bills, food and provisioning, and home-schooling/working from home; (3) relationships, care and privacy, and; (4) social, physical and mental health. The interviews also indicate how households coped and experienced relief payments and other related support policies during COVID-19. Drawing upon literature on disaster response, we highlight the centrality of vulnerability and resilience in recognising household exposure and sensitivity to COVID-19, and capabilities in coping. From this analysis, gaps in COVID-19 housing and welfare policy are exposed and guide a discussion for future housing policy interventions and pandemic planning.
Suggested Citation
Ralph Horne & Nicola Willand & Louise Dorignon & Bhavna Middha, 2023.
"Housing inequalities and resilience: the lived experience of COVID-19,"
International Journal of Housing Policy, Taylor & Francis Journals, vol. 23(2), pages 313-337, April.
Handle:
RePEc:taf:intjhp:v:23:y:2023:i:2:p:313-337
DOI: 10.1080/19491247.2021.2002659
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