First published in 1957, and reprinted with a new introduction
in 1986, Michael Young and Peter Willmott's book on family and
kinship in Bethnal Green in the 1950s is a classic in urban
studies.
A standard text in planning, housing, family studies and
sociology, it predicted the failure in social terms of the great
rehousing campaign which was getting under way in the 1950s. The
tall flats built to replace the old ?slum? houses were unpopular.
Social networks were broken up. The book had an immediate impact
when it appeared ? extracts were published in the newspapers, the
sales were a record for a report of a sociological study,
Government ministers quoted it. But the approach it advocated was
not accepted until the late 1960s, and by then it was too late.
This Routledge Revivals reissue includes the authors'
introduction from the 1986 reissue, reviewing the impact of the
book and its ideas thirty years on. They argue that if the lessons
implicit in the book had been learned in the 1950s, London and
other British cities might not have suffered the 'anomie' and
violence manifested in the urban riots of the 1980s.
General
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