<p><strong>"Through its emperical detail, the book is an invaluable addition to the specific field of gender and housing and through its sensitives and analytically clear theoretical framework of feminist understandings of inequality is also a welcome and much-needed addition to the more general work on comparative housing debates."</strong> - <em>Journal of Social Policy</em> </p><p><strong>"The real strength of the publication is the revealing of international conjunctions between androcentric labour market structures (at present in many countries enforced by the economic crisis), a privatization- and individualization-oriented housing market, and women’s housing opportunities across tenures. This might make it a new piece of key literature on the topic, addressing advanced students, researchers and housing policy makers, and supporting the prioritization of this topic in current housing debates"</strong> - <em>Christiane Droste, UrbanPlus, Berlin, Germany, International Journal of Housing Policy</em></p>