This article reviews Lee and Carlisle’s (2023) work that addresses how two local government authorities and a credit union collaborated to provide and manage homeless prevention loans to protect social housing tenants from eviction from their homes. The article locates the need for the loans in the historical context of UK governments’ changes to housing provisions and why the local government authorities found it necessary to provide grants to arrange the loans. The success of the loans and the way in which the loans are managed by the credit union is also reported
Interesting piece from the Guardian talking about local mortgage schemes to address affordable housi...
In recent years English housing associations have faced criticism on two principal fronts. Firstly, ...
Homelessness and precarious living conditions are on the rise across much of the Western world. This...
This paper examines the merits of homeless prevention loans offered by a credit union in the UK to t...
This article sets out the motivations, methods and means through which local authorities are engagin...
Since 2010, local authorities in England have faced a dramatic cut in funding from central governmen...
This is an accepted manuscript of an article published by Policy Press in Journal of Poverty and So...
Universal Credit (UC) has been rolling out since 2013 to radically alter the UK welfare system. Seve...
This article studies the impact of an increase in the limit of a direct equity loan provided by the ...
Devolution presented an opportunity for the Welsh Government to introduce changes to housing and hom...
In the first of two articles, Stewart Smyth outlines the recent history of policy changes towards so...
Housing policy is usually seen as the domain of national governments, and in many countries local au...
This article explains the depth and breadth of financial cuts endured by community safety organizati...
This article examines the dynamics of credit and debt in low income households, drawing on an action...
This article has two central aims. First, it problematises the long‐held consensus that homelessness...
Interesting piece from the Guardian talking about local mortgage schemes to address affordable housi...
In recent years English housing associations have faced criticism on two principal fronts. Firstly, ...
Homelessness and precarious living conditions are on the rise across much of the Western world. This...
This paper examines the merits of homeless prevention loans offered by a credit union in the UK to t...
This article sets out the motivations, methods and means through which local authorities are engagin...
Since 2010, local authorities in England have faced a dramatic cut in funding from central governmen...
This is an accepted manuscript of an article published by Policy Press in Journal of Poverty and So...
Universal Credit (UC) has been rolling out since 2013 to radically alter the UK welfare system. Seve...
This article studies the impact of an increase in the limit of a direct equity loan provided by the ...
Devolution presented an opportunity for the Welsh Government to introduce changes to housing and hom...
In the first of two articles, Stewart Smyth outlines the recent history of policy changes towards so...
Housing policy is usually seen as the domain of national governments, and in many countries local au...
This article explains the depth and breadth of financial cuts endured by community safety organizati...
This article examines the dynamics of credit and debt in low income households, drawing on an action...
This article has two central aims. First, it problematises the long‐held consensus that homelessness...
Interesting piece from the Guardian talking about local mortgage schemes to address affordable housi...
In recent years English housing associations have faced criticism on two principal fronts. Firstly, ...
Homelessness and precarious living conditions are on the rise across much of the Western world. This...