1st Edition

The Eclipse of Council Housing

By Ian Cole, Robert Furbey Copyright 1994
286 Pages
by Routledge

286 Pages
by Routledge

In the 1990s, council housing was widely criticised, rejected by government and was the object of waning public support. Yet at one time direct state provision accounted for one-third of the nation's housing stock. How did this decline come about? Originally published in 1994, Ian Cole and Robert Furbey trace the emergence, rise and decline of council housing and explore its fluctuating status... Read more

Acknowledgements.  Series Editor’s Preface.  Introduction.  1. Interpreting the Role of the State  Part I: The Development of State Housing Policy  2. The Origins of State Involvement  3. The Post-War Experience: State Housing and the Welfare Consensus  Part II: Council Housing in Use  4. Council Housing Design and Standards  5. Council Housing Management  6. Tenant Experiences and Responses  Part III: Council Housing in Crisis  7. The Impact of Thatcherism  8. Rescuing Council Housing?  Conclusion: A Total Eclipse?  Bibliography.  Index.

Biography

Ian Cole is Emeritus Professor of Housing Studies at Sheffield Hallam University. Ian was Head of Housing and then Director of the Centre for Regional Economic and Social Research at Sheffield Hallam University from 1986 to 2010. He has written research reports, published journal articles  and directed over forty research projects on issues such as leasehold, welfare reform, neighbourhood regeneration, UK housebuilding and housing market analysis. Ian has given evidence to many major government housing inquiries and was appointed Special Adviser on Housing to the Levelling Up, Housing and Communities Select Committee from 2023 to 2024.

Dr Robert Furbey was  Principal Lecturer  in  Urban Sociology and Politics at  Sheffield Hallam University until his  retirement in 2010. He was co-author of Housing and Urban Spatial Structure (1975). Robert has written academic papers on religion and faith communities in urban regeneration, tenant empowerment and housing professionalisation for major journals including Policy and Politics, Community Development Journal and Housing Theory and Society. Robert played a pioneering role in developing access, undergraduate and postgraduate courses in housing, including the National Certificate in Tenant Participation, and undertook research into participation for the Joseph Rowntree Foundation in the late 1990s.