Introduced under the Thatcher government, ‘Right to Buy’ has had a formative effect on housing in the UK for the past 35 years. In The Right to Buy? Selling Off Public and Social Housing, Alan Murie examines the policy’s long-standing and ongoing impact, and considers the implications of its more recent extension. While more explicit political analysis of the consequences of ‘Right to Buy’ would have bolstered the book’s arguments, John Picton welcomes this timely, detailed and important read
Since the 1990s, the renewal of council housing estates in London has involved widespread ‘decanting...
In the past few decades, urban regeneration policies have taken firm root in many Western European c...
Matthew Thompson, Reconstructing Public Housing: Liverpool’s hidden history of collective alternativ...
In the run up to the Conservative party conference, David Cameron outlined plans to bring back the R...
The introduction of the mandatory 'Right to Buy' (RTB) in 1980 for qualifying tenants in municipal h...
This paper examines how and why the Right to Buy (RTB) scheme changed drastically in the UK from 198...
Kate Barker emphasises the interconnectedness of the various elements of the housing system, and the...
We investigate the impact on social welfare of the United Kingdom (UK) policy introduced in 1980 by ...
In Municipal Dreams: The Rise and Fall of Council Housing, John Boughton offers a compelling and gro...
The authors acknowledge financial support from the Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC) (RES-...
In England the majority of householders live in homes that they own, with surveys demonstrating repe...
In May 2016 the Housing and Planning Act 2016 became law, the first purely Conservative government i...
Book review of Rachel G. Bratt, Michael E. Stone and Chester Hartman, A Right to Housing: Foundation...
In this article, Steffan Evans looks at how the extension of Right to Buy in England could alter the...
In May 2016 the Housing and Planning Act 2016 became law, the first purely Conservative government i...
Since the 1990s, the renewal of council housing estates in London has involved widespread ‘decanting...
In the past few decades, urban regeneration policies have taken firm root in many Western European c...
Matthew Thompson, Reconstructing Public Housing: Liverpool’s hidden history of collective alternativ...
In the run up to the Conservative party conference, David Cameron outlined plans to bring back the R...
The introduction of the mandatory 'Right to Buy' (RTB) in 1980 for qualifying tenants in municipal h...
This paper examines how and why the Right to Buy (RTB) scheme changed drastically in the UK from 198...
Kate Barker emphasises the interconnectedness of the various elements of the housing system, and the...
We investigate the impact on social welfare of the United Kingdom (UK) policy introduced in 1980 by ...
In Municipal Dreams: The Rise and Fall of Council Housing, John Boughton offers a compelling and gro...
The authors acknowledge financial support from the Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC) (RES-...
In England the majority of householders live in homes that they own, with surveys demonstrating repe...
In May 2016 the Housing and Planning Act 2016 became law, the first purely Conservative government i...
Book review of Rachel G. Bratt, Michael E. Stone and Chester Hartman, A Right to Housing: Foundation...
In this article, Steffan Evans looks at how the extension of Right to Buy in England could alter the...
In May 2016 the Housing and Planning Act 2016 became law, the first purely Conservative government i...
Since the 1990s, the renewal of council housing estates in London has involved widespread ‘decanting...
In the past few decades, urban regeneration policies have taken firm root in many Western European c...
Matthew Thompson, Reconstructing Public Housing: Liverpool’s hidden history of collective alternativ...