Ebook: Municipal dreams: the rise and fall of council housing
Author: Boughton John
- Tags: BUSINESS & ECONOMICS / Infrastructure, Housing policy, Housing policy--Great Britain--History, Low-income housing, Low-income housing--Great Britain--History, Public housing, Public housing--Great Britain--History, SOCIAL SCIENCE / General, Working class--Housing, Working class--Housing--Great Britain--History, History, Public housing -- Great Britain -- History, Low-income housing -- Great Britain -- History, Working class -- Housing -- Great Britain -- History, Housing policy -- Great Britain -- History, Wo
- Year: 2018
- Publisher: Verso Books
- City: Great Britain
- Edition: International version
- Language: English
- epub
Introduction -- 'How to provide housing for the people': origins -- 'The world of the future': the interwar period -- 'If only we will': Britain reimagined, 1940-51 -- 'The needs of the people': council housing, 1945-56 -- 'Get these people out of the slums': 1956-68 -- 'Anti-monumental, anti-stylistic, and fit for ordinary people': 1968-79 -- 'Rolling back the frontiers of the state': 1979-91 -- 'Thrown-away places': 1991-7 -- 'A different kind of community': 1997-2010 -- 'People need homes; these homes need people': 2010 to the present.;A narrative history of council housing-from slums to the Grenfell Tower Urgent, timely and compelling, Municipal Dreams brilliantly brings the national story of housing to life. In this landmark reappraisal of council housing, historian John Boughton presents an alternative history of Britain. Rooted in the ambition to end slum living, and the ideals of those who would build a new society, Municipal Dreams looks at how the state's duty to house its people decently became central to our politics. The book makes it clear why that legacy and its promise should be defended. Traversing the nation in this comprehensive social, political and architectural history of council housing, Boughton offers a tour of some of the best and most remarkable of our housing estates-some happily ordinary, some judged notorious. He asks us to understand their complex story and to rethink our prejudices. His accounts include extraordinary planners and architects who wished to elevate working men and women through design; the competing ideologies that have promoted state housing and condemned it; the economic factors that have always constrained our housing ideals; the crisis wrought by Right to Buy; and the evolving controversies around regeneration. Boughton shows how losing the dream of good housing has weakened our community and hurt its most vulnerable-as was seen most catastrophically in the fire at Grenfell Tower.
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