Analyzing the Impact of Public Housing Privatization on Immigrant Micro-Segregation in Milan

Author:

Costarelli Igor1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Sociology and Social Research, University of Milan Bicocca, Via Bicocca degli Arcimboldi 8, 20126 Milan, Italy

Abstract

In several Western European countries, a significant share of social rental housing stock has been sold since the 1980s as part of government policies aimed at promoting homeownership societies. Research has shown that tenure conversion has contributed to increasing socio-spatial segregation of lower-income groups, with diverging spatial patterns of homeownership among immigrants. This paper examines the impact of recent public housing privatization schemes in Milan in relation to micro-segregation and peripheralization processes of foreign populations, which represent distinctive features of immigrant residential distribution in this city. By employing name analysis, an unconventional approach in segregation studies, I inferred the geographical origins of homebuyers and mapped their distribution across the city. The findings reveal divergent purchasing behaviors, whereby Italians predominantly acquire properties in semi-central areas currently undergoing urban regeneration. In contrast, immigrants tend to concentrate their acquisitions in peripheral post-war public housing neighborhoods or in areas predominantly inhabited by residents with similar geographical origins. This paper contributes to the existing literature on ethnic residential segregation in Southern European cities by shedding light on the underexplored role of public housing privatization policies in shaping specific residential patterns and housing outcomes among different groups.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

General Social Sciences

Reference49 articles.

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2. Arbaci, Sonia (2019). Paradoxes of Segregation: Housing Systems, Welfare Regimes and Ethnic Residential Change in Southern European Cities, Wiley-Blackwell.

3. Housing Pathways of Immigrants in the City of Athens: From Homelessness to Homeownership. Considering Contextual Factors and Human Agency;Balampanidis;Housing, Theory and Society,2020

4. Banca d’Italia (2012). I bilanci delle famiglie italiane nell’anno 2010. Supplemento al Bollettino Statistico, 6, 25.

5. Detecting Foreigners’ Spatial Residential Patterns in Urban Contexts: Two Tales from Italy;Benassi;Applied Spatial Analysis,2019

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