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Class, Déclassement and Reclassement in the Housing Market

Par : Contributeur(s) : Type de matériel : TexteTexteLangue : français Détails de publication : 2013. Sujet(s) : Ressources en ligne : Abrégé : Based on the example of residents in poor housing in Paris, this article focuses on the importance of housing in social class mechanisms and the interdependence between social and residential status for those in positions of precarity. Housing deprivation entails a downgrading of status in society, especially for those who experience “residential déclassement” (i.e., are unable to house themselves decently because of the situation in the housing market despite being comparatively socially integrated). Far from being passive, the poorly housed fight against this decline and aspire to residential as much as social reclassement by way of social housing. However, for the most deprived, rehousing can bring about social malaise when accompanied by a “residential surclassement,” that is, when social status is not “as high” as a new residential status. In their case, residential and social statuses work like connecting vessels. Obliged to choose between housing and consumption, it is impossible for them to climb one of the hierarchies without slipping back in the other. Social and housing orders are thus tightly interwoven and any changes in one of the orders that are not followed by similar changes in the other have significant psychological and social effects.
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Based on the example of residents in poor housing in Paris, this article focuses on the importance of housing in social class mechanisms and the interdependence between social and residential status for those in positions of precarity. Housing deprivation entails a downgrading of status in society, especially for those who experience “residential déclassement” (i.e., are unable to house themselves decently because of the situation in the housing market despite being comparatively socially integrated). Far from being passive, the poorly housed fight against this decline and aspire to residential as much as social reclassement by way of social housing. However, for the most deprived, rehousing can bring about social malaise when accompanied by a “residential surclassement,” that is, when social status is not “as high” as a new residential status. In their case, residential and social statuses work like connecting vessels. Obliged to choose between housing and consumption, it is impossible for them to climb one of the hierarchies without slipping back in the other. Social and housing orders are thus tightly interwoven and any changes in one of the orders that are not followed by similar changes in the other have significant psychological and social effects.

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