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Distributed for On Point Press

Home Truths

Fixing Canada’s Housing Crisis

Uncovers why Canadians are burdened by the world’s highest household debt after decades of failed housing policy and how the situation can be fixed.

Hundreds of thousands of Canadians exist on the edge. Renters fear eviction, homeowners feel trapped, and both are vulnerable to becoming homeless with a single stroke of misfortune.

Unaffordable housing in Canada is tearing communities apart. Rising prices force long-time residents to move elsewhere, while established businesses are forced to close their doors because they cannot find staff who can afford to live nearby. 

In Home Truths, housing expert Carolyn Whitzman explores Canada’s crisis from all sides, including defining what adequate housing looks like, explaining why non-market housing is crucial, and outlining how and why to tackle ever-growing wealth disparities between renters and those who own. What she details has wide applicability in all nations struggling with a lack of adequate housing.

Home Truths details the decades of policy that got the country into this mess and shows how all levels of government can work together to provide affordable housing where it is needed, using evidence-backed ideas from planners, politicians, developers, and advocates at home and abroad.
This is the book that anyone needs to understand, and solve, our housing crisis.

334 pages | 13 halftones, 30 illustrations, 10 tables | 6 x 9 | © 2024

Economics and Business: Economics--Development, Growth, Planning

Political Science: Public Policy

Sociology: Urban and Rural Sociology


Reviews

"Carolyn Whitzman is one of Canada’s leading housing researchers – and it shows. She provides a wide suite of tools to address housing issues and covers issues from supply to zoning to speculation. This is a fantastic and impactful book!"

Brian Doucet, coauthor of Streetcars and the Shifting Geographies of Toronto: A Visual Analysis of Change

"The recent debate over Canada's housing crisis – and in particularly calls for more supply – has obscured the precise nature of the crisis, which is that we’ve failed to find ways to add truly affordable housing for those in greatest need. Carolyn Whitzman’s work pushes back against the dominant narrative with much needed data and analysis that should provide policy-makers with an effective roadmap for reform."

John Lorinc, senior editor at Spacing Magazine

Table of Contents

Introduction:

1. What Is a Home?

2. Why Is Housing So Expensive?

3. How Did We Get in this Mess?

4. Who Is in Charge?

5. Who Needs What Kinds of Homes Where at What Cost?

6. Can Canada End Homelessness?

7. Why Start with Non-Market Housing?

8. How Can Well-Located Housing Become Abundant Again?

9. How Can Renters Have the Same Rights As Owners?

10. Is There a Future for Affordable Homeownership?

11. Who Pays for What?

12. What Can I Do?

References

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