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1.
20 Century Br Hist ; 29(4): 576-604, 2018 Dec 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29860425

ABSTRACT

Narratives of deindustrialization, urban decline and failing public housing and the negative outcomes associated with these processes dominate accounts of post-war Scotland, bolstering the interpretation of Scottish exceptionalism in a British context. Within these accounts working people appear as victims of powerful and long-term external forces suffering sustained and ongoing deleterious vulnerabilities in terms of employment, health, and housing. This article challenges this picture by focusing on the first Scottish new town which made space for working people's aspiration and new models of the self manifested in new lifestyles and social relations. Drawing on archival data and oral history interviews, we identify how elective relocation fostered and enabled new forms of identity predicated upon new housing, new social relations, and lifestyle opportunities focused on the family and home and elective social networks no longer determined by traditional class and gender expectations. These findings permit an intervention in the historical debates on post-war housing and social change which go beyond the materialistic experience to deeper and affective dimensions of the new town self.


Subject(s)
Gender Identity , Public Housing , Employment , History, 20th Century , History, 21st Century , Organizations , Public Housing/history , Scotland
2.
JAMA ; 309(1): 13, 2013 Jan 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23280198
4.
Int J Urban Reg Res ; 36(2): 281-96, 2012.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22518885

ABSTRACT

Housing nationalization as a solution to urban inequalities has a long history in European social thought. This article describes housing nationalization in a state-socialist context. Using a political economy perspective and relying on recently released archival material about housing in 1950s Romania, I argue that nationalization may be regarded as a special type of urban process. Nationalization raised the occupancy rate and intensified the usage of existing housing, desegregated centrally located neighborhoods, turned some residential space into office space for state institutions, facilitated the degradation of the existing housing stock and gradually produced a socialist gentry. Aside from similarities with other state-socialist nationalizations from the same period, Romanian nationalization resembled the housing policies of other statist regimes. The data also suggest that, even in the context of revolutionary change, the state is a sum of multiple, often diverging projects, rather than a coherent actor.


Subject(s)
Political Systems , Public Housing , Public Policy , Social Change , Social Class , Urban Population , History, 20th Century , Housing/economics , Housing/history , Housing/legislation & jurisprudence , Political Systems/history , Public Housing/history , Public Policy/economics , Public Policy/history , Public Policy/legislation & jurisprudence , Romania/ethnology , Social Change/history , Social Class/history , Urban Population/history
5.
Urban Stud ; 49(3): 489-504, 2012.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22500343

ABSTRACT

This article examines whether housing tenure and regional differences in housing affordability have an impact on labour mobility. This relationship is important for understanding the sources of structural unemployment and impediments to economic growth. Using two sample surveys from the Czech Republic, this research reveals that at the individual level housing tenure is the most powerful factor determining willingness to change residence for employment reasons. A time-series regression analysis reveals that the impact of housing affordability on observed interregional migration patterns is relatively weak and that this effect is concentrated among the highly educated seeking employment in the capital, Prague. These results demonstrate that housing tenure has a significant impact on labour migration plans in case of unemployment and that the dynamic impact of regional differences in housing affordability on labour mobility is concentrated within the most highly skilled segment of the labour force.


Subject(s)
Housing , Population Dynamics , Social Mobility , Socioeconomic Factors , Czech Republic/ethnology , History, 20th Century , History, 21st Century , Housing/economics , Housing/history , Housing/legislation & jurisprudence , Population Dynamics/history , Public Housing/history , Residence Characteristics/history , Social Mobility/economics , Social Mobility/history , Socioeconomic Factors/history , Transients and Migrants/education , Transients and Migrants/history , Transients and Migrants/legislation & jurisprudence , Transients and Migrants/psychology
6.
Urban Stud ; 48(7): 1503-527, 2011.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21922684

ABSTRACT

This article investigates the evolution of sustainability positioning in residential property marketing to shed light on the specific role and responsibility of housebuilders and housing investors in urban development. To this end, an analysis is made of housing advertisements published in Basel, Switzerland, over a period of more than 100 years. The paper demonstrates how to draw successfully on advertisements to discern sustainability patterns in housing, using criteria situated along the dimensions building, location and people. Cluster analysis allows five clusters of sustainability positioning to be described­namely, good location, green building, comfort living, pre-sustainability and sustainability. Investor and builder types are differently located in these clusters. Location emerges as an issue which, to a large extent, is advertised independently from other sustainability issues.


Subject(s)
Conservation of Energy Resources , Conservation of Natural Resources , Housing , Public Health , Residence Characteristics , Urban Renewal , Conservation of Energy Resources/economics , Conservation of Energy Resources/history , Conservation of Energy Resources/legislation & jurisprudence , Conservation of Natural Resources/economics , Conservation of Natural Resources/history , Conservation of Natural Resources/legislation & jurisprudence , Europe/ethnology , History, 20th Century , History, 21st Century , Housing/economics , Housing/history , Housing/legislation & jurisprudence , Marketing/economics , Marketing/education , Marketing/history , Marketing/legislation & jurisprudence , Program Evaluation/economics , Public Health/economics , Public Health/education , Public Health/history , Public Health/legislation & jurisprudence , Public Housing/history , Residence Characteristics/history , Social Responsibility , Switzerland/ethnology , Urban Renewal/economics , Urban Renewal/education , Urban Renewal/history , Urban Renewal/legislation & jurisprudence
7.
Int J Urban Reg Res ; 35(3): 644-58, 2011.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21898937

ABSTRACT

Squatting as a housing strategy and as a tool of urban social movements accompanies the development of capitalist cities worldwide. We argue that the dynamics of squatter movements are directly connected to strategies of urban renewal in that movement conjunctures occur when urban regimes are in crisis. An analysis of the history of Berlin squatter movements, their political context and their effects on urban policies since the 1970s, clearly shows how massive mobilizations at the beginning of the 1980s and in the early 1990s developed in a context of transition in regimes of urban renewal. The crisis of Fordist city planning at the end of the 1970s provoked a movement of "rehab squatting" ('Instandbesetzung'), which contributed to the institutionalization of "cautious urban renewal" ('behutsame Stadterneuerung') in an important way. The second rupture in Berlin's urban renewal became apparent in 1989 and 1990, when the necessity of restoring whole inner-city districts constituted a new, budget-straining challenge for urban policymaking. Whilst in the 1980s the squatter movement became a central condition for and a political factor of the transition to "cautious urban renewal," in the 1990s large-scale squatting ­ mainly in the eastern parts of the city ­ is better understood as an alien element in times of neoliberal urban restructuring.


Subject(s)
Housing , Population Dynamics , Social Change , Transients and Migrants , Urban Health , Urban Renewal , Berlin/ethnology , History, 20th Century , Housing/economics , Housing/history , Housing/legislation & jurisprudence , Political Systems/history , Population Dynamics/history , Public Housing/history , Residence Characteristics/history , Social Change/history , Transients and Migrants/education , Transients and Migrants/history , Transients and Migrants/legislation & jurisprudence , Transients and Migrants/psychology , Urban Health/history , Urban Population/history , Urban Renewal/economics , Urban Renewal/education , Urban Renewal/history , Urban Renewal/legislation & jurisprudence
8.
Urban Stud ; 48(8): 1581-1604, 2011.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21949948

ABSTRACT

The gentrification that has transformed high-poverty neighbourhoods in US cities since the mid 1990s has been characterised by high levels of state reinvestment. Prominent among public-sector interventions has been the demolition of public housing and in some cases multimillion dollar redevelopment efforts. In this paper, the racial dimension of state-supported gentrification in large US cities is examined by looking at the direct and indirect displacement induced by public housing transformation. The data show a clear tendency towards the demolition of public housing projects with disproportionately high African American occupancy. The pattern of indirect displacement is more varied; public housing transformation has produced a number of paths of neighbourhood change. The most common, however, involve significant reductions in poverty, sometimes associated with Black to White racial turnover and sometimes not. The findings underscore the central importance of race in understanding the dynamics of gentrification in US cities.


Subject(s)
Cities , Poverty Areas , Public Housing , Race Relations , Residence Characteristics , Cities/economics , Cities/ethnology , Cities/history , Cities/legislation & jurisprudence , History, 20th Century , History, 21st Century , Population Dynamics/history , Public Housing/history , Race Relations/history , Race Relations/legislation & jurisprudence , Race Relations/psychology , Residence Characteristics/history , Social Change/history , Socioeconomic Factors/history , United States/ethnology , Urban Renewal/economics , Urban Renewal/education , Urban Renewal/history , Urban Renewal/legislation & jurisprudence
9.
Urban Stud ; 48(6): 1181-200, 2011.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21913358

ABSTRACT

This paper investigates the relationship between neighborhood cohesion and organization and class in Hong Kong. It draws on a survey of 1200 face-to-face interviews in an up-market private housing estate on Hong Kong Island, a large, neither rich nor poor public housing estate in the New Territories and a mixed-use, low-income inner-city neighborhood in Kowloon. Four indexes measure interneighborhood and intraneighborhood differences­namely, attraction to neighborhood, neighboring and psychological sense of community adapted from the Buckner scale of social cohesion, and social organization developed by the author. There are significant differences between the neighborhoods. However, these differences are not duplicated between occupation-defined class within the neighborhoods, although there are some differences based on self-defined social class. The likely explanation lies in the character of the three neighborhoods, government policy, effect of private housing management and the low level of spatial differentiation by income across the city.


Subject(s)
Housing , Residence Characteristics , Social Class , Urban Health , Urban Population , Cultural Characteristics/history , History, 20th Century , History, 21st Century , Hong Kong/ethnology , Housing/economics , Housing/history , Housing/legislation & jurisprudence , Local Government/history , Public Housing/history , Residence Characteristics/history , Social Class/history , Social Support , Urban Health/history , Urban Population/history
10.
Int J Urban Reg Res ; 35(2): 414-20, 2011.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21319435

ABSTRACT

This essay on Shenzhen, China, presents three vignettes addressing the question of home in a city of migrants. The first section explores the ubiquitous narratives of success forming the city's foundational myth. The second follows this myth into the world of a Shenzhen filmmaker and his characters, as they navigate the tension between the idea of home and the urge to start anew, resulting in the suspended possibility of the title. The last section looks at young architects who hope to preserve the city's heterotopic sites of migrants and original villagers through architectural innovations. The cases show how an economy of desire supplements the political economy of this export-driven city. The city appears as an urban desiring machine that produces itself as an object of desire for the migrants of all classes who flock to its factories, "urban villages", white-collar jobs, luxury villas and underground economy. The essay is an encounter with the mythology of success and failure, the intertwining of home as an end and home as the beginning, and with the manipulation of space that allows residents to control their own subjectivity.


Subject(s)
Cities , Population Dynamics , Public Housing , Socioeconomic Factors , Urban Health , Urban Renewal , China/ethnology , Cities/economics , Cities/ethnology , Cities/history , Cities/legislation & jurisprudence , History, 20th Century , History, 21st Century , Housing/economics , Housing/history , Housing/legislation & jurisprudence , Population Dynamics/history , Public Housing/history , Residence Characteristics/history , Socioeconomic Factors/history , Urban Health/history , Urban Population/history , Urban Renewal/economics , Urban Renewal/education , Urban Renewal/history , Urban Renewal/legislation & jurisprudence
11.
J Urban Hist ; 36(6): 792-813, 2010.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21141450

ABSTRACT

This essay reexamines the history of public housing and the controversy it generated from the Great Depression to the Cold War. By recasting that history in the global arena, it demonstrates that the debate over public housing versus homeownership was also a debate over the meaning of American citizenship and democracy, pointing up starkly divergent notions about what was and was not American. Through an examination of national conflicts and neglected local struggles, this article further shows that the fight over public housing was far more meaningful and volatile than traditionally assumed. Both critics and advocates of public housing drew from international experiences and imagery in positioning the home as a constitutive feature of citizenship in American democracy. Fears of Bolshevism, fascism, and communism served to internationalize issues of race, space, and housing and together shaped the decision of whether a decent home was an American right or privilege.


Subject(s)
Democracy , Government Programs , Public Housing , Residence Characteristics , Social Responsibility , Social Welfare , Civil Rights/economics , Civil Rights/education , Civil Rights/history , Civil Rights/legislation & jurisprudence , Civil Rights/psychology , Cost-Benefit Analysis/economics , Cost-Benefit Analysis/history , Cost-Benefit Analysis/legislation & jurisprudence , Cultural Characteristics/history , Government Programs/economics , Government Programs/education , Government Programs/history , Government Programs/legislation & jurisprudence , History, 20th Century , Ownership/economics , Ownership/history , Ownership/legislation & jurisprudence , Political Systems/history , Population Dynamics/history , Public Housing/history , Residence Characteristics/history , Social Welfare/economics , Social Welfare/ethnology , Social Welfare/history , Social Welfare/legislation & jurisprudence , Social Welfare/psychology , United States/ethnology
12.
J Urban Hist ; 36(6): 831-48, 2010.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21141451

ABSTRACT

This essay examines the complicated relationship among hippie communes, the environmental movement, and New Left and Black Power militants in the late 1960s and early 1970s. In those relationships lie the roots of the divide that separated environmental issues on one hand and urban issues on the other during the 1970s and beyond. This essay examines how the fight between militants and back-to-the-land communards and environmentalists, between what we might call urban progressives and antiurban progressives, was staged as a fight between those who cared about the issues of the city and those who turned their backs on them. In this way, this essay locates the city more centrally in politics of the era.


Subject(s)
Civil Disorders , Environment , Housing , Life Style , Public Health , Social Change , Cities/economics , Cities/ethnology , Cities/history , Cities/legislation & jurisprudence , Civil Disorders/economics , Civil Disorders/ethnology , Civil Disorders/history , Civil Disorders/legislation & jurisprudence , Civil Disorders/psychology , Conservation of Natural Resources/economics , Conservation of Natural Resources/history , Conservation of Natural Resources/legislation & jurisprudence , History, 20th Century , Housing/economics , Housing/history , Housing/legislation & jurisprudence , Life Style/ethnology , Life Style/history , Public Health/economics , Public Health/education , Public Health/history , Public Health/legislation & jurisprudence , Public Housing/history , Social Change/history , United States/ethnology
13.
Urban Stud ; 47(11): 2347-366, 2010.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20845592

ABSTRACT

Policy-makers in several countries are turning to income- and tenure-mixing strategies in an attempt to reverse decades of social and economic isolation in impoverished urban areas. In the US city of Chicago, all high-rise public housing developments across the city are being demolished, public housing residents are being dispersed throughout the metropolitan area and 10 new mixed-income developments are being created on the footprint of former public housing complexes. Findings are presented from in-depth interviews with residents across income levels and tenures at two mixed-income developments and the paper explores residents' perceptions of the physical, psychological and social impacts of the mixed-income setting on their lives.


Subject(s)
Public Housing , Social Change , Socioeconomic Factors , Urban Health , Urban Population , Chicago/ethnology , History, 20th Century , History, 21st Century , Interviews as Topic , Population Dynamics , Public Housing/history , Quality of Life/legislation & jurisprudence , Quality of Life/psychology , Residence Characteristics , Social Change/history , Social Class/history , Stress, Psychological/ethnology , Stress, Psychological/history , Urban Health/history , Urban Population/history
14.
Bus Hist ; 52(4): 517-35, 2010.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20658777

ABSTRACT

The "improved public house" movement in the inter-war years was a central part of the shift towards retailing by the brewing industry. An important part of the reform movement was the alliance between certain brewers, notably Whitbread, and "social workers", particularly those associated with the University Settlement movement in London. Using the papers of Sydney Nevile, the importance of a particular social milieu is outlined, calling into question attempts to align the movement to improve public houses with transatlantic Progressivism. Rather, this alliance drew upon longstanding English traditions of public service and religious affiliation amongst a fraction of the gentry.


Subject(s)
Public Health , Public Housing , Social Class , Social Conditions , Social Work , History, 20th Century , Politics , Public Health/economics , Public Health/education , Public Health/history , Public Health/legislation & jurisprudence , Public Housing/history , Public Sector/economics , Public Sector/history , Public Sector/legislation & jurisprudence , Religion/history , Social Class/history , Social Conditions/economics , Social Conditions/history , Social Conditions/legislation & jurisprudence , Social Problems/economics , Social Problems/ethnology , Social Problems/history , Social Problems/legislation & jurisprudence , Social Problems/psychology , Social Responsibility , Social Work/economics , Social Work/education , Social Work/history , Social Work/legislation & jurisprudence , United Kingdom/ethnology
16.
20 Century Br Hist ; 21(4): 510-39, 2010.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21466001

ABSTRACT

This article contributes to a growing literature on working-class suburbanization by arguing that both the residualization and privatization of council housing need to be properly historicized. This case study of housing policy in the borough of Brighton demonstrates that council house sales between the 1950s and 1970s were important in the residualization of inter-war estates well before the 'right to buy' legislation of the 1980s. Concerns about excessively affluent tenants can also be traced to the inter-war period, although it was not until the late 1950s that local Conservatives sought to push affluent council tenants into owner occupation via capping incomes and encouraging council house sales. The article shows that slum clearance had long been central to the local council's provision of municipal housing and that apart from two short periods following the First and Second World Wars, council housing was conceived of primarily as a residual tenure by those in control of policy implementation. It further demonstrates that slum clearance between the 1920s and 1960s altered the social constituency for council housing and, combined with selective privatization, specific allocation policies and disinvestment, led to the stigmatization of certain inter-war estates. The article suggests that further case studies are needed in order to test the wider applicability of these arguments during the middle years of the twentieth century.


Subject(s)
Policy , Poverty Areas , Privatization/history , Public Housing/history , England , History, 20th Century , Ownership/history , Socioeconomic Factors , Suburban Population/history
17.
Soc Serv Rev ; 84(4): 597-614, 2010.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21488321

ABSTRACT

This study examines the role of individual- and family-level factors in predicting the length of shelter stays for homeless families. Interviews were conducted with all families exiting one of six emergency family shelters in Worcester, Massachusetts, between November 2006, and November 2007. Analyses, using an ordinary least squares regression model, find that families with a positive alcohol or drug screen in the year prior stay 85 days longer than those without a positive screen; families leaving shelter with a housing subsidy stay 66 days longer than those leaving without a subsidy. Demographic factors, education, employment, health, and mental health are not found to predict shelter stay duration. Consistent with prior research, housing resources relate to families' time in shelter; with the exception of a positive substance abuse screen, individual-level problems are not related to their time in shelter. Efforts to expand these resources at the local, state, and national levels are a high priority.


Subject(s)
Family Health , Family , Ill-Housed Persons , Public Assistance , Public Housing , Family/ethnology , Family/history , Family/psychology , Family Health/ethnology , Government Programs/economics , Government Programs/education , Government Programs/history , Government Programs/legislation & jurisprudence , History, 21st Century , Ill-Housed Persons/education , Ill-Housed Persons/history , Ill-Housed Persons/legislation & jurisprudence , Ill-Housed Persons/psychology , Interviews as Topic , Massachusetts/ethnology , Public Assistance/economics , Public Assistance/history , Public Assistance/legislation & jurisprudence , Public Housing/history , Socioeconomic Factors/history
18.
Public Adm ; 88(4): 928-42, 2010.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21290817

ABSTRACT

This paper draws on the findings from a research project on partnership arrangements between the police and housing departments on three Australian public housing estates to tackle problems associated with illicit drug activity and anti-social behaviour (ASB). The analysis focused on the setting up of the partnerships and the interactions that followed from these institutional arrangements. The assumption that informs the paper is that when studying partnerships there is a need for a more critically framed analysis. The temptation to posit "a successful model" of what partnership entails and then to judge practices in relation to this model is considerable, but it inevitably falls into the trap of constructing a narrative of partnership success or failure in terms of individual agency (that is, the degree of commitment from individuals). The analysis undertaken in this paper has therefore sought to fathom a more complex set of organizational processes. Rather than confine the discussion to issues of success and failure, the study foregrounds the subjective accounts of individuals who work within partnership and the constraints they encounter. The paper therefore makes explicit the cultural tensions within and across agencies, contestation as to the extent of the policy "problem," and the divergent perspectives on the appropriate modes of intervention.


Subject(s)
Cultural Diversity , Police , Public Housing , Public-Private Sector Partnerships , Social Behavior Disorders , Socioeconomic Factors , Australia/ethnology , Government/history , History, 20th Century , History, 21st Century , Illicit Drugs/economics , Illicit Drugs/history , Law Enforcement/history , Police/economics , Police/education , Police/history , Police/legislation & jurisprudence , Public Housing/history , Public Policy/economics , Public Policy/history , Public Policy/legislation & jurisprudence , Public-Private Sector Partnerships/economics , Public-Private Sector Partnerships/history , Public-Private Sector Partnerships/legislation & jurisprudence , Social Behavior Disorders/economics , Social Behavior Disorders/ethnology , Social Behavior Disorders/history , Social Behavior Disorders/psychology , Social Responsibility , Socioeconomic Factors/history
20.
Local Popul Stud ; (80): 59-77, 2008.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19069048

ABSTRACT

Audrey Perkyns is a retired teacher, formerly of Rainham in Kent but now living in Northumberland. She has been a regular contributor to LPS over the years, and retains an active interest in nineteenth-century Kentish demographic and social history.


Subject(s)
Child Welfare/history , Poverty/history , Public Housing/history , Child , Child Welfare/legislation & jurisprudence , England , History, 19th Century , Humans , Public Housing/statistics & numerical data
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