ROMANIAN HOUSING PROBLEMS: PAST AND PRESENT Cover Image

ROMANIAN HOUSING PROBLEMS: PAST AND PRESENT
ROMANIAN HOUSING PROBLEMS: PAST AND PRESENT

Author(s): Gyöngyi Pásztor, László Péter
Subject(s): Social Sciences
Published by: Studia Universitatis Babes-Bolyai
Keywords: housing problem; post-communism; block of flats; Romania.

Summary/Abstract: The Romanian housing question is different from other East Central European reality (see Enyedi, 1988; Szelényi, 1996). Due to the specific urbanization and modernization process (Ronas, 1984) that took place in the socialist era and the rapid privatisation of the housing stock after the turn of the regime (Tosics-Hegedüs, 2003), Romania faces an interesting situation. More than 70 percent of the urban population lives in so called block of flats, in large and sometimes overcrowded neighbourhoods. 95 percent of these blocks of flat are privately owned (Pásztor, 2003), while the possibility to acquire one is low due to the high prices. In these circumstances the housing issue is one of the most disturbing structural and functional social problem, with certain cultural aspects – the social pressure upon the young generation to acquire their own houses is very powerful while renting is a strong social stigma (Zamfir, 2001). The present article not only brings out the Romanian general process on the early post-socialist practices (as structural causes and larger social context) but also describes the housing issue along the following aspects: the socialist legacy, the appearance of housing market after 1989, as a regulatory institution; the lack of available and/or affordable housing. Briefly, the social problem (Macionis, 2004; Castells, 2000) of housing is described and presented with empirical examples in conflictual perspective embedded in the larger process of the Romanian transition; the narrative is based on statistics. All these could be an instrument not only for social scientists but also for social policy makers and real estate developers.

  • Issue Year: 54/2009
  • Issue No: 1
  • Page Range: 79-100
  • Page Count: 22
  • Language: English