Housing Market Renewal and Social Class

Regular price €69.99
A01=Chris Allen
Author_Chris Allen
Category=JH
city
class stratification
class-based urban housing policy critique
council
edge
Edge Lane
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Gentrification Literature
households
Housing Market
Housing Market Failure
Housing Market Renewal
Imminent Relation
Interested Disinterest
lane
liverpool
Liverpool City Council
middle
Middle Class Formation
Middle Class Habitus
Middle Class Households
Middle Class Intelligentsia
people
phenomenological analysis
qualitative case study
Reay 2001a
Rent Gap
Resource Epistemology
respondents
Social Class Category
Social Class Formation
social inequality research
Swedish Labour Movement
Symbolic Domination
urban regeneration policy
urban sociology
Violates
working
Working Class Formation
Working Class Houses
Working Class People
Working Class Relation
Working Class Respondents

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415415613
  • Weight: 460g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 15 Oct 2007
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Housing market renewal is one of the most controversial urban policy programmes of recent years. Housing Market Renewal and Social Class critically examines the rationale for housing market renewal: to develop 'high value' housing markets in place of the so-called 'failing markets' of low-cost housing. Whose interests are served by such a programme and who loses out?

Drawing on empirical evidence from Liverpool, the author argues that housing market renewal plays to the interests of the middle classes in viewing the market for houses as a field of social and economic 'opportunities', a stark contrast to a working class who are more concerned with the practicalities of 'dwelling'. Against this background of these differing attitudes to the housing market, Housing Market Renewal and Social Class explores the difficult question of whether institutions are now using the housing market renewal programme to make profits at the expense of ordinary working-class people. Reflecting on how this situation has come about, the book critically examines the purpose of current housing market renewal policies, and suggests directions for interested social scientists wishing to understand the implications of the programme.

Housing Market Renewal and Social Class provides a unique phenomenological understanding of the relationship between social class and the market for houses, and will be compelling reading for anybody concerned with the situation of working class people living in UK cities.


Chris Allen is Professor of Sociology at Manchester Metropolitan University.