Overview of the Study
This systematic review, authored by Brigitte Steinhoff of the Munich Personal RePEc Archive, examines how public attitudes towards “social housing” and “affordable housing” affect societal outcomes. The paper, published online in December 2024, collates findings from 18 peer‑reviewed articles selected from ScienceDirect, Emerald Insight, Mendeley and ACM Digital Library. It investigates economic stability, health, social integration and policy implications across diverse national contexts.
Key Quantitative Findings
- The literature search yielded 256 articles, of which 114 were publicly accessible. After screening, 18 articles formed the final analysis set.
- Nine of these highlighted links between affordable housing and poverty reduction, improved well‑being and economic efficiency.
- Six studies presented distinct analytical tools, including Latent Dirichlet Allocation for sentiment analysis, Structural Equation Modelling, pre‑tenancy affordability assessments and a Critical Success Factor Framework for sustainable, innovative housing.
- The review notes that social and affordable housing contribute to lower poverty rates and better health outcomes, while misconceptions and NIMBY attitudes hinder implementation.
Definitions and Terminology
The authors distinguish “social housing” (state‑ or non‑profit‑provided, low‑rent accommodation) from “affordable housing” (housing costing ≤ 30 % of household income, encompassing rentals, ownership and mixed‑income models). Both terms carry different policy connotations and public perceptions, influencing acceptance and the design of interventions.
Methodological Approach
A systematic literature review was conducted using keyword searches for “social housing” and “affordable housing”. Initial yields were 155 documents from ScienceDirect, 107 from Emerald, 37 from Mendeley and 20 from ACM, totalling 256. After duplicate removal and relevance screening, 39 articles were read in abstract, 23 examined in full, and 18 selected for detailed analysis. The review combines bibliometric mapping, thematic clustering and qualitative synthesis.
Main Themes Identified
- Economic Impact – Housing stability supports employment, education and income mobility.
- Health Benefits – Secure, affordable homes correlate with lower stress and better physical health.
- Social Integration – Mixed‑income developments reduce segregation and foster community cohesion.
- Public Perception – Stigmatisation and misconceptions about low‑income residents fuel resistance.
- Sustainability – Emerging research links energy‑efficient design with affordable housing goals.
Analytical Tools Highlighted
- Latent Dirichlet Allocation (LDA) – extracts latent topics from textual data, revealing six sentiment themes such as “right to housing” and “negative connotations”.
- Pre‑tenancy Affordability Assessments – evaluate both market conditions and policy mechanisms.
- Critical Success Factor Framework – integrates design, production, technology and sustainability dimensions.
- Structural Equation Modelling (SEM) – assesses relationships between housing satisfaction and socio‑demographic variables.
Policy Implications for Europe
The review underscores the need for evidence‑based communication to counter NIMBY sentiment, the importance of mixed‑income models to avoid segregation, and the integration of sustainability criteria into housing design. It suggests that policymakers should leverage the identified analytical tools to monitor public attitudes and evaluate programme effectiveness across EU member states.
Conclusions for Sustainable Housing Stakeholders
The systematic review provides robust evidence that socially and affordably priced housing delivers economic, health and social benefits, while also highlighting persistent barriers rooted in public misunderstanding. For a pan‑European audience focused on sustainable housing, the study offers concrete data, methodological insights and a set of actionable recommendations to guide future policy, planning and research towards inclusive, resilient and environmentally responsible housing solutions.

