
What are the disadvantages of share housing ownership?
Where do I start … much depends on how the property is titled. If titled as a tenancy in common, the multiple owners do not own distinctive percentages of the property and neither can force the other to sell. If the property is titled as a joint tenancy specific ownership percentages can be applied and individual Shares Of the property can be sold to others. But if 2 people are buying a house together and living together, then suddenly their relationship sours for what ever reason, one person can’t suddenly decide to walkout on the other with their share of the investment or stop paying their share of a loan (if applicable) because both will suffer when the property forecloses or the one who stays and pays gets no credit because the one who left would still be in for half of the equity. Or if they can find someone to sell their share of a house to can cause other problems for the other owner(s). It can get messy fast. But when people are legally married it works out because the law sees married couples property as shared until a judge tells them differently.
Affordable First Time Buyer Shared Ownership Property, Erith,Kent DA8 2bed flat £61K
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In Search of a Home: Rental and Shared Housing in Latin America $52.00 … |
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Home ownership. Getting in, getting from, getting out. Part III (Housing and Urban Policy Studies) $62.05 This book provides an overview of the effects of home ownership, a housing sector that has grown rapidly in recent years in many countries, not least because this is normally encouraged by governments. The first part of the subtitle, Getting in, refers to processes in the development of the homeownership stock including problems of access, which in turn implies issues of affordability, the viabili… |
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Shared ownership housing pilot project: Habitations Populaires Desjardins du Centre du Quebec, Trois-Rivieres, Quebec … |
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Ownership, Control, and the Future of Housing Policy $197.81 This comparative study is the first to center on the key issues of homeownership and control today in a number of industrialized countries. Experts from Canada, Great Britain, Russia, and the United States draw a crossnational and interdisciplinary, informed picture of basic issues and values, current trends, and different policy approaches that have been tested in recent years. This overview of various national policies and programs is intended for students and scholars, policymakers and public administrators dealing with fundamental problems in homeownership and control. Ownership and control has long been a central theme in the heated public debates in different countries over housing policy. How are notions about ownership and control tied to culture? What are some of the basic values about homeownership in western societies? What place has homeownership played in the life cycles of black and white families in the United States? What limitations to privatization exist in housing reform in Russia now? Who benefits or loses from public housing sales in Britain? How are multifamily public housing projects of the 1960s in the United States being converted to communitycorporation control? What different kinds of tenant attitudes exist toward tenant management in two U.S. public housing developments? What type of role do nonprofit housing cooperatives in Canada play? These are only some of the questions that the ten chapters set out to answer. Reference lists accompany each of the chapters, adding to the usefulness of this public policy study for text purposes. Author: Hays, R. Allen/ Hays, R. Allen Series Title: Contributions in Political Science Series Number: 316 Binding Type: Hardcover Number of Pages: 288 Publication Date: 1993/05/30 Language: English Dimensions: 9.00 x 6.00 x 0.75 inches |
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Employee Ownership $89.22 Employee ownership occurs when a business is owned in whole or in part by its employees. Employees are often given a share of the business after a certain length of employment or they can buy shares at any time. A business owned entirely by its employees (such as a worker cooperative) will not, therefore, have its shares sold on public stock markets, often opting instead for mixed ownership arrangements involving a trust. Employeeowned companies often adopt profit sharing where the profits of the company are shared with the employees. They also often have boards of directors elected directly by the employees. Some corporations make formal arrangements for employee participation, called Employee Stock Ownership Plans (ESOPs). Author: Miller, Frederic P./ Vandome, Agnes F./ McBrewster, John Binding Type: Paperback Number of Pages: 114 Publication Date: 2010/01/06 Language: English Dimensions: 5.98 x 9.01 x 0.27 inches |
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Private Ownership of Public Housing in Singapore $24.56 No Synopsis Available |
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Housing : Shared interests in health and Development $23.4 No Synopsis Available |
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Employee Ownership and Shared Capitalism By Carberry, Edward J. (EDT) $47.39 Author: Carberry, Edward J. (EDT) Series Title: Labor and Employment Relations Association Series Subtitle: New Directions in Research Publication Date: 2011/07/31 Number of Pages: 346 Binding Type: Paperback Language: English Depth: 0.75 Width: 5.50 Height: 8.25 |
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Ownership $81.25 Ownership. Public ownership, Personal property, Private property, Common ownership, Worker cooperative, Intellectual property, Real estate, Cooperative, Slavery, Ownership society, Cadastre, Legal person Author: Miller, Frederic P./ Vandome, Agnes F./ McBrewster, John Binding Type: Paperback Number of Pages: 96 Publication Date: 2009/10/25 Language: English Dimensions: 5.98 x 9.01 x 0.22 inches |
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Beyond Home Ownership: Housing, Welfare and Society $54.57 No Synopsis Available |
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Home Truths; Property Ownership and Housing Wealth in Australia $36.35 No Synopsis Available |
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Under One Roof : Issues and Innovations in Shared Housing $24.33 No Synopsis Available |
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In Search of a Home : Rental and Shared Housing in Latin America $50.7 No Synopsis Available |
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Belonging: Australians, Place and Aboriginal Ownership $53.63 This extraordinary book explores the feelings of nonAboriginal Australians as they articulate their sense of belonging to the land. Peter Read asks the pivotal questions: What is the meaning of places important to nonAboriginal Australians from which the Indigenous people have already been dispossessed? How are contemporary Australians thinking through the problem of knowing that their places of attachment are also the places that Aboriginals lovedand lost? And are the sites of all our deep affections to be contested, articulated, shared, foregone or possessed absolutely? Author: Read, Peter Binding Type: Paperback Number of Pages: 260 Publication Date: 2000/08/10 Language: English Dimensions: 8.96 x 6.03 x 0.65 inches |
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City of American Dreams : A History of Home Ownership and Housing Reform in Chicago, 1871-1919 $24.38 No Synopsis Available |
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Shared Capitalism at Work : Employee Ownership, Profit and Gain Sharing, and Broad-Based Stock Options $94.59 No Synopsis Available |
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Entrepreneurial Vernacular: Developers’ Subdivisions in the 1920s $52 During the 1920s, enterprising realtors, housing professionals, and builders developed the models that became the inspiration for the subdivision tract housing now commonplace in the U.S. Suburban subdivisions of individual family homes are so familiar a part of the American landscape that it is hard to imagine a time when they were not common in the U. S. The shift to large-scale speculative subdivisions is usually attributed to the period after World War II. In Entrepreneurial Vernacular: Developers’ Subdivisions in the 1920s, Carolyn S. Loeb shows that the precedents for this change in single-family home design were the result of concerted efforts by entrepreneurial realtors and other housing professionals during the 1920s. In her discussion of the historical and structural forces that propelled this change, Loeb focuses on three typical speculative subdivisions of the 1920s and on the realtors, architects, and building-craftsmen who designed and constructed them. These examples highlight the “shared set of planning and design concerns” that animated realtors (whom Loeb sees as having played the “key role” in this process) and the network of housing experts with whom they associated. Decentralized and loosely coordinated, this network promoted home ownership through flexible strategies of design, planning, financing, and construction which the author describes as a new and “entrepreneurial” vernacular. Author Biography: Carolyn S. Loeb is an associate professor of art history at Central Michigan University and a contributor to The Encyclopedia of Urban America. |
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Housing Association Law $31.75 Used – This edition has been revised and updated to take account of the substantial statutory developments in the law relating to housing associations, particularly the Housing Act 1988 and the Local Government and Housing Act 1988. New material is incorporated on tenants’ rights, housing association finance, housing association registration, subsidiaries, joint ventures and consortia, shared ownership, government powers and the relationship between housing associations and local authorities. |
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Housing Association Law $4.39 Used – This edition has been revised and updated to take account of the substantial statutory developments in the law relating to housing associations, particularly the Housing Act 1988 and the Local Government and Housing Act 1988. New material is incorporated on tenants’ rights, housing association finance, housing association registration, subsidiaries, joint ventures and consortia, shared ownership, government powers and the relationship between housing associations and local authorities. |
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In Search of a Home: Rental and Shared Housing in Caracas, Santiago and Mexico City $0.73 Used – For many years, self-help settlement and the owner-occupier have commanded the attention of governments and researchers, leaving huge numbers of tenants and sharers invisible. However, the assumption that every family both wished and was able to become an owner-occupier is now under scrutiny and it is becoming clear in many of the larger Latin American cities that there is a limit to universal home ownership, even of the self-help kind. Several Third World governments have expressed conce |
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In Search of a Home: Rental and Shared Housing in Caracas, Santiago and Mexico City $11.17 Used – For many years, self-help settlement and the owner-occupier have commanded the attention of governments and researchers, leaving huge numbers of tenants and sharers invisible. However, the assumption that every family both wished and was able to become an owner-occupier is now under scrutiny and it is becoming clear in many of the larger Latin American cities that there is a limit to universal home ownership, even of the self-help kind. Several Third World governments have expressed conce |
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Where the Other Half Lives: Lower Income Housing in a Neoliberal World $14 New – Housing is a hot topic. House prices have spiralled both in Britain and across the Western world, alienating millions of people from the property market. At the same time, social housing has disintegrated, as properties have been sold off or neglected. Efforts to fill the gap through ‘affordable housing’ – shared ownership or housing associations – are barely adequate. With the collapse of the subprime mortgage market in the US and the collapse of Northern Rock at home, what does the futur |
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Where the Other Half Lives: Lower Income Housing in a Neoliberal World $13.38 New – Housing is a hot topic. House prices have spiralled both in Britain and across the Western world, alienating millions of people from the property market. At the same time, social housing has disintegrated, as properties have been sold off or neglected. Efforts to fill the gap through ‘affordable housing’ – shared ownership or housing associations – are barely adequate. With the collapse of the subprime mortgage market in the US and the collapse of Northern Rock at home, what does the futur |
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Where the Other Half Lives: Lower Income Housing in a Neoliberal World $14 Used – Housing is a hot topic. House prices have spiralled both in Britain and across the Western world, alienating millions of people from the property market. At the same time, social housing has disintegrated, as properties have been sold off or neglected. Efforts to fill the gap through ‘affordable housing’ – shared ownership or housing associations – are barely adequate. With the collapse of the subprime mortgage market in the US and the collapse of Northern Rock at home, what does the futu |
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Where the Other Half Lives: Lower Income Housing in a Neoliberal World $13.38 Used – Housing is a hot topic. House prices have spiralled both in Britain and across the Western world, alienating millions of people from the property market. At the same time, social housing has disintegrated, as properties have been sold off or neglected. Efforts to fill the gap through ‘affordable housing’ – shared ownership or housing associations – are barely adequate. With the collapse of the subprime mortgage market in the US and the collapse of Northern Rock at home, what does the futu |
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Where the Other Half Lives: Lower Income Housing in a Neoliberal World $59.99 New – Housing is a hot topic. House prices have spiralled both in Britain and across the Western world, alienating millions of people from the property market. At the same time, social housing has disintegrated, as properties have been sold off or neglected. Efforts to fill the gap through ‘affordable housing’ – shared ownership or housing associations – are barely adequate. With the collapse of the subprime mortgage market in the US and the collapse of Northern Rock at home, what does the futur |
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Where the Other Half Lives: Lower Income Housing in a Neoliberal World $42.7 New – Housing is a hot topic. House prices have spiralled both in Britain and across the Western world, alienating millions of people from the property market. At the same time, social housing has disintegrated, as properties have been sold off or neglected. Efforts to fill the gap through ‘affordable housing’ – shared ownership or housing associations – are barely adequate. With the collapse of the subprime mortgage market in the US and the collapse of Northern Rock at home, what does the futur |
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