Local authority land is viewed as part of the supply solution to inflating national housebuilding targets in England. The shift from local authorities as development control agents to housing enablers has drawn political and public attention. Some commentators emphasise the release of local authority land for private housebuilding as a potentially significant contribution to new supply. Whilst estimates vary about the amount of developable land in local authorities’ portfolios, little research has been undertaken into the practical barriers to more extensive use of publicly owned land for housing development. Local planning authorities are universally, and statutorily, concerned with both the delivery of dwellings to live in and making plac...
The paper contributes to existing research that examines how government policy and state actors supp...
The paper contributes to research that examines how state actors support the financialisation of lan...
This paper considers the extent to which local authorities could use the potential of publicly-owned...
Of all the inputs into housing production, land can be the most challenging to source. This is becau...
We may be seeing the start of a new era in which local authorities build housing again, says Janice ...
Over the last five years the house-building industry has built an average of 140,000 new dwellings p...
Set against a background of enduring austerity and an accelerating housing crisis, local authorities...
Purpose – The aim of this study is to define land use policy sources of barriers to community-based ...
This paper examines housing investment pressures and the local planning response in St Ives, Cornwal...
Following years of austerity, the announcement in 2015 that local governments in England will be fis...
Since 1988, housing associations - now called Registered Social Landlords (RSLs) - have been respons...
There is a popular view that land use planning regulations (‘planning’) is hostile to both developme...
AbstractThis paper explores the transformations of the housebuilding industry under the policy requi...
The policy intention behind the state launch of neighbourhood planning in England was to overcome co...
© 2016 IBF, The Institute for Housing and Urban ResearchThe devolution of governance to communities ...
The paper contributes to existing research that examines how government policy and state actors supp...
The paper contributes to research that examines how state actors support the financialisation of lan...
This paper considers the extent to which local authorities could use the potential of publicly-owned...
Of all the inputs into housing production, land can be the most challenging to source. This is becau...
We may be seeing the start of a new era in which local authorities build housing again, says Janice ...
Over the last five years the house-building industry has built an average of 140,000 new dwellings p...
Set against a background of enduring austerity and an accelerating housing crisis, local authorities...
Purpose – The aim of this study is to define land use policy sources of barriers to community-based ...
This paper examines housing investment pressures and the local planning response in St Ives, Cornwal...
Following years of austerity, the announcement in 2015 that local governments in England will be fis...
Since 1988, housing associations - now called Registered Social Landlords (RSLs) - have been respons...
There is a popular view that land use planning regulations (‘planning’) is hostile to both developme...
AbstractThis paper explores the transformations of the housebuilding industry under the policy requi...
The policy intention behind the state launch of neighbourhood planning in England was to overcome co...
© 2016 IBF, The Institute for Housing and Urban ResearchThe devolution of governance to communities ...
The paper contributes to existing research that examines how government policy and state actors supp...
The paper contributes to research that examines how state actors support the financialisation of lan...
This paper considers the extent to which local authorities could use the potential of publicly-owned...