Abstract
This article examines claims that social housing allocations policies can,
on the one hand, contribute to and on the other, counter, social exclusion.
In setting the scene, the paper investigates connections between
housing processes and social exclusion and describes the development of
social housing allocations systems over the past few decades. Drawing on
evidence from two recently completed national studies in England and
Scotland it shows that allocation policies contribute to social exclusion in
three main ways. First, a large proportion of social landlords restrict eligibility
for social housing thereby contributing directly to exclusion.
Second, mechanisms within allocation systems continue to segregate the
most excluded to the worst residential areas. Third, through the 1990s
allocation policies became increasingly coercive, so reducing or eliminating
tenant choice over their own housing in distinct contrast to the
choice that is available in the private market. The paper then reviews the
dilemmas faced by policy-makers: whilst aspects of allocations contribute
to social exclusion at the individual level, they may be justified by their
role in promoting sustainable residential communities. Although there
are hopes that the ‘choice-based’ approaches to lettings which emerged
in the late 1990s can both boost community sustainability and counter
the disabling impact of coercive approaches, the article suggests it is
unlikely that such methods can significantly enhance social inclusion as
long as social housing remains a housing sector of last resort, with in-built
disadvantages.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law,Public Administration,Social Sciences (miscellaneous)
Cited by
41 articles.
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