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This book uses a case study of a low-cost home ownership initiative
at the margins of renting and owning provided by social landlords -
known as shared ownership - to challenge everyday assumptions held
about the 'social' and the 'legal' in property. The authors provide
a study of the construction of property ownership, from the
creation of this idea through to the present day, and offer a fresh
consideration of key issues surrounding property, ownership, and
the social. Analysing a diverse range of sources (from archives to
micro-blogs, observation of housing providers, and interviews with
shared owners), the authors explain the significance of the things
(from the formal documents like leases, to odd materials like sweet
wrappers and cigarette butts) commonly found in the narratives
around shared ownership which are used to construct it as private
ownership in everyday life. Ultimately, they uncover how this dream
of ownership can become tarnished when people's identities as
'owners' come under threat, and as such, these findings will
provide fascinating insight into the intricacies of so-called home
ownership for scholars of Law, Criminology, and Sociology.
While the future shape and direction of housing policy is
uncertain, the process of transformation looks set to continue. A
wide range of housing policy initiatives emerged during the first
term of the New Labour government and 2000 saw the publication of
the first major policy statement on housing for over 10 years - the
government's much anticipated Housing Green Paper. This book makes
a distinctive and innovative contribution to the debate. Bringing
together leading scholars from the fields of housing law and
housing policy, it aims to engage with the central concerns of
policy and to demonstrate that the parallel debates of housing
studies and socio-legal studies can be strengthened by a fuller
exchange of ideas. Each chapter examines a key theme in
contemporary housing policy and seeks to locate policy in relation
to broader theoretical debates about the provision of social
welfare. Two steps forward is essential reading for academics,
students and policy makers with an interest in housing policy and
law, as well as students on wider social policy, public
administration, policy and management courses.
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