Die Wohnungszustände der arbeitenden Klassen und ihre Reform
1869
by Sax
Emil SaxPublic HealthIndustrial RevolutionProletariatDemographyInvestmentCapital AccumulationClass StruggleGround RentProfit and LossInterventionismSocial PolicyTaxationSubsidies
Table of Contents · 19 segments
1
Title Page and Table of Contentsessay
2
Introduction: The Housing Question and Its Historical Emergenceessay
3
Part I, Chapter 1: Hygiene, Health, and the Technical-Economic Formulation of Worker Housing Reformchapter
4
Part I, Chapter 2: Comfort, Domesticity, and the Moral Power of Good Housingchapter
5
Part I, Chapter 3: Cost, Rent, Ownership, and the Social-Economic Aim of Worker Home Acquisitionchapter
6
Part I, Chapter 4: Cottage System versus Barrack Housingchapter
7
Part I, Chapter 5: Worker Colonies, Cooperative Economy, and the Social Future of Settlementchapter
8
Part II, Chapter 1: Employers and the Latent Association as Agents of Housing Reformchapter
9
Part II, Chapter 2: Housing Reform as a Business Enterprise and the English Building Societieschapter
10
English model dwellings, commercial returns, and limits of barrack housingchapter
11
Mulhouse cité ouvrière: cottages, worker ownership, and welfare institutionschapter
12
Other German building societies and chapter conclusion on commercial housing reformchapter
13
Worker self-help and English building societieschapter
14
Limits and future of worker self-help: employer combinations and building cooperativeschapter
15
State aid for housing reform: theoretical justification and dutieschapter
16
Removing state-created obstacles: building codes, trades, credit, taxeschapter
17
Police power against unhealthy dwellings and English housing legislationchapter
18
Positive state aid, subsidies, loans, and conclusionchapter
19
Lessons from Mulhouse and continental diffusion before the German critiquechapter