Abstract

Withdrawal from socially owned housing provision and the privatization of the stock have stimulated growth of the owner-occupied sector in many European countries. These processes have also led to a more significant role for the private rental sector. Apart from a model of ‘social deliberation’ there are other models to explain the evolution of this sector in its socio-political and historical context. In the formation of a large private rental sector in Turkey, public policy had no contribution to make. Instead, it was a particular mode of urban development that allowed the proliferation of the sector as a subsidiary process of urbanization. The relative conditions of tenants and the policy requirements in this context are very different than those observed elsewhere.

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