Contents

Housing Access as a Fundamental Human Right

Author(s): Patrick Kyle1, Patsy Healey2
1Patsy Healey, Newcastle University, King’s Gate, Newcastle upon Tyne, NE17RU, UK
2Centre for Public Policy and Governance, Leicester University, Leicester, UK
Patrick Kyle
Patsy Healey, Newcastle University, King’s Gate, Newcastle upon Tyne, NE17RU, UK
Patsy Healey
Centre for Public Policy and Governance, Leicester University, Leicester, UK

Abstract

This paper advances a normative argument that secure access to housing is essential to human well-being and should be treated as a basic freedom, comparable in importance to the right to property. It begins by briefly clarifying why rights matter and how they frame the paper’s inquiry. The discussion then develops the idea of housing as a freedom right, drawing on contributions from theorists such as Jeremy Waldron and Martha Nussbaum. At the core of the argument is the claim that basic human functioning depends on one’s living conditions: without adequate housing, people cannot reliably pursue fundamental activities or sustain a dignified standard of life. From this standpoint, housing is not simply a market good but a prerequisite for human flourishing. The paper closes by outlining the policy implications of recognizing housing in this way, calling for a reorientation of housing policy toward rights-based implementation that better enables dignified living and social participation.

Keywords: access to housing, human rights, essential needs, housing policy, social justice
Copyright © 2024 Patrick Kyle, Patsy Healey. This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.