The HABITAT project investigates how legal frameworks governing urban spaces—especially housing, credit, and property—contribute to socio-economic inequality in European cities. The core hypothesis is that structural features of legal systems (e.g. privatisation, planning policies, rent regulation, access to credit) can reproduce exclusion and benefit capital accumulation for the wealthiest. The project combines law, economics, and data science to offer a new empirical basis for understanding urban marginalisation, focusing on four cities (Berlin, Milan, Paris, London) and four main objectives:
O1 proposes a new historical periodisation of urban legal changes since the 1980s;
O2 compares housing and mortgage regulation across legal systems;
O3 develops statistical models to test the causal impact of legal reforms;
O4 builds a general theory of urban law and inequality, bridging doctrinal, economic, and network approaches.
Methodologically, HABITAT introduces a novel blend of doctrinal legal analysis, econometric models (DiD, IV, fixed effects), natural language processing (sentiment and topic modelling), and network science. The team includes legal scholars, economists, and data scientists working jointly to construct high-quality datasets and deploy reproducible methods.
The project contributes to the emerging field of the economics of urban law and aims to produce not only academic publications but also tools for policy analysis, including a set of taxonomies and dashboards on urban case law, legal frameworks, and regulatory outcomes.