The Green Agenda: Why the Provision and Development of Gypsy/Traveller Sites in Scotland is a Health Hazard as Much as an Accommodation Priority

Author:

Clark ColinORCID

Abstract

Issues of environmental justice regarding housing, health, and other public services have been subjected to critical scrutiny in Scotland for some time. However, such concerns have not focused on Gypsy/Traveller communities and their accommodation on local authority and private sites. Politically, the Scottish National Party (SNP) and the Scottish Greens have been in favour of providing and funding site/pitch upgrades, including developing new site locations. These suggestions have been controversial, and reactions have been debated, not least by local councillors and the media. Drawing on the work of Kristeva (1982) and Tyler (2013), this paper argues that one explanation for understanding responses to Gypsy/Traveller sites is via the concept of (social) abjection. When examining local contexts, spatial locations, and the environmental circumstances of local authority sites, much work is still to be done in challenging instances of environmental and health injustice and anti-Gypsy/Traveller prejudice in Scotland.

Publisher

Cambridge University Press (CUP)

Reference47 articles.

1. Boyle, K. and Flegg, A. (2022) The Right to Adequate Housing in the UK: An Explainer. Briefing: Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, Part Three, May 2022. Nuffield Foundation. https://www.nuffieldfoundation.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/11/Boyle-Briefing-3-Housing_18MAY22.pdf (accessed 12-08-2022)

2. Clark, R. (2020) ‘Pitlochry Gypsy/Traveller siblings want apology from the Scottish Government for ‘Tinker Experiment’, The Daily Record, February 28th. https://www.dailyrecord.co.uk/news/local-news/pitlochry-gypsy-traveller-siblings-want-21595754 (accessed 09-05-2022)

3. Flett, A. (2023) ‘All chalets at Perth Traveller site to be replaced in in £4m transformation’, The Courier, January 17th. https://www.thecourier.co.uk/fp/news/perth-kinross/4062601/double-dykes-traveller-site-ruthvenfield-perth/ (accessed 03-06-2023)

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