Chris Foye
Lecturer
Real Estate Development
Henley Business School University of Reading
United Kingdom
Biography
Chris’s research interests cut across a wide range of disciplines, including Real Estate & Planning, Sociology and Economics. His PhD was titled “Housing and Happiness: an empirical study” and used large scale national panel datasets to examine how housing affects subjective well-being. Chris is particularly interested in how housing consumption (e.g. choice of house, neighbourhood, tenure) is driven by social status considerations. In attempting to explain and theorise this relationship, he draws from both the economics literature (e.g. positional good theory) and the sociological literature (e.g. the work of Pierre Bourdieu). Aside from his studies, he has worked with the JET Programme in Japan and for the Department of Work and Pensions as a Social Researcher.
Research Interest
Chris is particularly interested in how housing consumption (e.g. choice of house, neighbourhood, tenure) is driven by social status considerations. In attempting to explain and theorise this relationship, he draws from both the economics literature (e.g. positional good theory) and the sociological literature (e.g. the work of Pierre Bourdieu).
Publications
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Foye C (2016) The relationship between size of living space and subjective well-being. Journal of Happiness Studies.
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Foye C, Clapham D, Gabrieli T (2017) Home-ownership as a social norm and positional good: subjective well-being evidence from panel data. Urban Studies.