The Localism Act 2011 granted social landlords in England the right to award fixed-term (flexible) tenancies, thereby ending the right of new tenants to a secure tenancy. Reform was justified via reference to a revisionist critique of social housing, which accused security of tenure of promoting dependency, undercutting social mobility and preventing the effective operation of the sector as a welfare service. This article draws on empirical evidence from qualitative interviews with more than 140 social tenants to explore the legitimacy of these claims and consider the potential impact of ending security of tenure on the well-being of tenants. Analysis reveals security of tenure to be a source of stability that helps mediate the precariousne...
Ongoing neoliberal policies have realigned the links between housing and welfare, positioning reside...
Ongoing neoliberal policies have realigned the links between housing and welfare, positioning reside...
With the shifts in housing tenure patterns in post-war Britain being so decisive and apparently rele...
This article starts from the observation that social rented housing in Britain is in transition. Evi...
A policy shift in the last decade or so has led to an emphasis on demand side subsidies in the form ...
Contemporary debates around affordability have largely focused on homeownership and private renting....
With the advent of flexible tenancies, marketised rents, the abolition of a consumer-focused regulat...
The policy of tenure neutrality championed by the International Union of Tenants as essential to a r...
The role and function of social housing in England are being recast. A radical programme of reform i...
The role and function of social housing in England are being recast. A radical programme of reform i...
The policy of tenure neutrality championed by the International Union of Tenants advances a model of...
The low level of residential mobility in England, particularly in the social sector, has been a cont...
Ongoing neoliberal policies have realigned the links between housing and welfare, positioning reside...
Ongoing neoliberal policies have realigned the links between housing and welfare, positioning reside...
Ongoing neoliberal policies have realigned the links between housing and welfare, positioning reside...
Ongoing neoliberal policies have realigned the links between housing and welfare, positioning reside...
Ongoing neoliberal policies have realigned the links between housing and welfare, positioning reside...
With the shifts in housing tenure patterns in post-war Britain being so decisive and apparently rele...
This article starts from the observation that social rented housing in Britain is in transition. Evi...
A policy shift in the last decade or so has led to an emphasis on demand side subsidies in the form ...
Contemporary debates around affordability have largely focused on homeownership and private renting....
With the advent of flexible tenancies, marketised rents, the abolition of a consumer-focused regulat...
The policy of tenure neutrality championed by the International Union of Tenants as essential to a r...
The role and function of social housing in England are being recast. A radical programme of reform i...
The role and function of social housing in England are being recast. A radical programme of reform i...
The policy of tenure neutrality championed by the International Union of Tenants advances a model of...
The low level of residential mobility in England, particularly in the social sector, has been a cont...
Ongoing neoliberal policies have realigned the links between housing and welfare, positioning reside...
Ongoing neoliberal policies have realigned the links between housing and welfare, positioning reside...
Ongoing neoliberal policies have realigned the links between housing and welfare, positioning reside...
Ongoing neoliberal policies have realigned the links between housing and welfare, positioning reside...
Ongoing neoliberal policies have realigned the links between housing and welfare, positioning reside...
With the shifts in housing tenure patterns in post-war Britain being so decisive and apparently rele...