Comparing asset-based welfare capitalism: wealth inequality, housing finance and household risk

Article Properties
  • Language
    English
  • Publication Date
    2022/03/30
  • Journal
  • Indian UGC (journal)
  • Refrences
    70
  • Citations
    1
  • Gareth Bryant Department of Political Economy, The University of Sydney, Sydney, NSW, Australia
  • Ben Spies-Butcher Department of Sociology, Macquarie University, Sydney, NSW, Australia
  • Adam Stebbing Department of Sociology, Macquarie University, Sydney, NSW, Australia
Cite
Bryant, Gareth, et al. “Comparing Asset-Based Welfare Capitalism: Wealth Inequality, Housing Finance and Household Risk”. Housing Studies, vol. 39, no. 2, 2022, pp. 459-80, https://doi.org/10.1080/02673037.2022.2056150.
Bryant, G., Spies-Butcher, B., & Stebbing, A. (2022). Comparing asset-based welfare capitalism: wealth inequality, housing finance and household risk. Housing Studies, 39(2), 459-480. https://doi.org/10.1080/02673037.2022.2056150
Bryant, Gareth, Ben Spies-Butcher, and Adam Stebbing. “Comparing Asset-Based Welfare Capitalism: Wealth Inequality, Housing Finance and Household Risk”. Housing Studies 39, no. 2 (2022): 459-80. https://doi.org/10.1080/02673037.2022.2056150.
Bryant G, Spies-Butcher B, Stebbing A. Comparing asset-based welfare capitalism: wealth inequality, housing finance and household risk. Housing Studies. 2022;39(2):459-80.
Journal Categories
Geography
Anthropology
Recreation
Environmental sciences
Geography
Anthropology
Recreation
Human ecology
Anthropogeography
Settlements
Cities
Urban geography
Political science
Political institutions and public administration (General)
Social Sciences
Social Sciences
Communities
Classes
Races
Urban groups
The city
Urban sociology
Social Sciences
Communities
Classes
Races
Urban groups
The city
Urban sociology
City planning
Refrences
Title Journal Journal Categories Citations Publication Date
Lock-in and lock-out: COVID-19 and the dynamics of the asset economy 2021
Social reproduction in the neoliberal era: Payments, leverage and the Minskian household 2019
The really big trade-off: Home ownership and the welfare state in the new world and the old 1998
The temporary welfare state: The political economy of job keeper, job seeker and ‘snap back’ 2020
The Oxford Handbook of Economic Inequality 2011
Citations
Title Journal Journal Categories Citations Publication Date
Flash in the pan or eureka moment? What can be learned from Australia's natural experiment with basic income during COVID‐19

International Social Security Review
  • Political science: Political institutions and public administration (General)
2024
Citations Analysis
The category Political science: Political institutions and public administration (General) 1 is the most commonly referenced area in studies that cite this article. The first research to cite this article was titled Flash in the pan or eureka moment? What can be learned from Australia's natural experiment with basic income during COVID‐19 and was published in 2024. The most recent citation comes from a 2024 study titled Flash in the pan or eureka moment? What can be learned from Australia's natural experiment with basic income during COVID‐19. This article reached its peak citation in 2024, with 1 citations. It has been cited in 1 different journals. Among related journals, the International Social Security Review cited this research the most, with 1 citations. The chart below illustrates the annual citation trends for this article.
Citations used this article by year