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Oksana Mont

Oksana Mont

Professor

Oksana Mont

Living smaller: acceptance, effects and structural factors in the EU

Author

  • Matthias Lehner
  • Jessika Luth Richter
  • Halliki Kreinin
  • Pia Mamut
  • Edina Vadovics
  • Josefine Henman
  • Oksana Mont
  • Doris Fuchs

Summary, in English

This article examines limits to per capita living space (i.e. living smaller and/or sharing living space) as a measure for achieving sufficiency in housing. It studies the acceptance, motivation and side-effects of voluntarily reducing living space in five European Union countries: Germany, Hungary, Latvia, Spain and Sweden. Insights are derived from an extensive collection of qualitative empirical material collected from citizen and stakeholder ‘thinking labs’ across the five case countries. Overall, the data reveal an initial reluctance among citizens to reduce living space voluntarily. They also point to some major structural barriers: the housing market and its regulatory framework, social inequality, or dominant societal norms regarding ‘the ideal home’. Enhanced community amenities can compensate for reduced private living space, though contingent upon a clear allocation of rights and responsibilities. Participants also reported positive effects to living smaller, including increased time for leisure activities and proximity to services. This was often coupled with urbanization, which may also be part of living smaller in the future.

Department/s

  • The International Institute for Industrial Environmental Economics
  • Centre for Retail Research at Lund University
  • LTH Profile Area: Circular Building Sector

Publishing year

2024-06-27

Language

English

Pages

215-230

Publication/Series

Buildings and Cities

Volume

5

Issue

1

Document type

Journal article

Publisher

Web Portal Ubiquity Press

Topic

  • Business Administration

Status

Published

Project

  • EU 1.5° Lifestyles
  • Centre for Retail Research at Lund University

ISBN/ISSN/Other

  • ISSN: 2632-6655