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Drawing upon Foucauldian analyzes of governmentality, the authors
contend that social housing must be understood according to a range
of political rationalities that saturate current practice and
policy. They critically address the practice of dividing social
from private tenure; situating subjects such as the purpose and
financing of social housing, the regulation of its providers and
occupiers and its relationship to changing perceptions of private
renting and owner-occupation, within the context of an argument
that all housing tenures form part of an understanding of social
housing. They also take up the ways in which social housing is
regulated through the invocation and manipulation of obscure
notions of housing 'need' and 'affordability', and finally, they
consider how social housing has provided a focus for debates about
sustainable communities and for concerns about anti-social
behaviour. Regulating Social Housing provides a rich and insightful
analysis that will be of value to legal scholars, criminologists
and other social scientists with interests in housing, urban
studies and contemporary forms of regulation.
Shortlisted for the SLSA-Hart Socio-Legal Book Prize 2011
Governing, Independence and Expertise tells the story of the
not-for-profit housing sector in England, focusing on its
representative body, the National Housing Federation. The story
tells of how the Federation and associations influenced their own
space of governing through deploying discourses of independence and
expertise; how being governed, and governing, become, at times, one
and the same. The National Federation of Housing Societies was born
in 1935 out of the apparent failure of housing societies,
associations and charitable trusts to tackle the 'problem of the
slums'. Its story was a familiar one - organisations have often set
up collective structures to facilitate intervention in government.
Viewed historically the success of the project is, nevertheless,
remarkable, given that the housing association sector is now a
major force in social housing provision. Moreover housing
associations have pioneered many programmes which are central to
our 'modernised' welfare state - such as private finance,
independence and entrepreneurialism. Through the story of the
Federation, the book examines the role of non-governmental actors
in mechanisms of governing, engaging contemporary debates about
public services and the nature of the 'social' - the limits of the
role of the not-for-profit sector; the impact of private funders;
and the disappearance of the notion of 'public'.
Drawing upon Foucauldian analyzes of governmentality, the authors
contend that social housing must be understood according to a range
of political rationalities that saturate current practice and
policy. They critically address the practice of dividing social
from private tenure; situating subjects such as the purpose and
financing of social housing, the regulation of its providers and
occupiers and its relationship to changing perceptions of private
renting and owner-occupation, within the context of an argument
that all housing tenures form part of an understanding of social
housing. They also take up the ways in which social housing is
regulated through the invocation and manipulation of obscure
notions of housing 'need' and 'affordability', and finally, they
consider how social housing has provided a focus for debates about
sustainable communities and for concerns about anti-social
behaviour. Regulating Social Housing provides a rich and insightful
analysis that will be of value to legal scholars, criminologists
and other social scientists with interests in housing, urban
studies and contemporary forms of regulation.
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