ABSTRACT

Hovels to Highrise traces how governments in five European countries became involved in replacing industrial revolution urban slums with mass high-rise, high density concrete estates. As the book considers each country's housing history and traditions, and analyses the contrasting structures and systems, it finds convergence of problems in the growing tensions of their most disadvantaged communities.
Anne Power underlines the continuing drift towards deeper polarization, a problem that the European Community will not be able to ignore with the interlocking but multi-lingual, multi-ethnic, urban societies of the future. The book's detailed coverage of the historical, political amd social changes relating to housing within the various countries make it an important text for students and practitioners concerned with housing, urban affairs, social policy and administration.

chapter |20 pages

Introduction

part |2 pages

Part I: France

chapter 1|6 pages

Background

chapter 2|11 pages

Early housing developments

chapter 3|14 pages

After the Second World War

chapter 4|8 pages

Social landlords

chapter 5|9 pages

Private housing

chapter 6|10 pages

Difficult-to-manage estates

chapter 7|8 pages

Current issues and conclusions

part |4 pages

Part II: Germany

chapter 8|9 pages

Background

chapter 10|16 pages

Post-war housing

chapter 11|8 pages

Housing in the 1970s and 1980s

chapter 12|11 pages

The Neue Heimat crisis

chapter 13|7 pages

Changes in the 1980s

chapter 14|6 pages

Housing change in East Germany

part |2 pages

Part III: Britain

chapter 16|5 pages

Background

chapter 17|9 pages

Early housing developments

chapter 18|7 pages

After the First World War

chapter 19|12 pages

After the Second World War

chapter 20|8 pages

Council landlords

chapter 22|6 pages

Legislative changes of the Thatcher years

chapter 23|12 pages

A changing public role

chapter 24|4 pages

Conclusions

part |4 pages

Part IV: Denmark

chapter 25|11 pages

Background

chapter 26|6 pages

Development of social housing

chapter 27|7 pages

After the Second World War

chapter 28|7 pages

Private house-building

chapter 30|8 pages

Conditions in the 1980s

chapter 31|9 pages

The rescue of mass housing areas

chapter 32|5 pages

Post-war housing achievements

part |2 pages

Part V: Ireland

chapter 33|9 pages

Background

chapter 34|9 pages

The start of Irish housing policy

chapter 35|5 pages

Irish housing in limbo—between the wars

chapter 36|7 pages

After the Second World War

chapter 37|4 pages

The 1970s

chapter 38|4 pages

Developments in the 1980s

chapter 40|7 pages

An overview and conclusions

part |2 pages

Part VI Summary and conclusions

chapter 41|4 pages

Summary of five country studies

chapter 42|14 pages

Main findings

chapter 43|10 pages

General themes

chapter 44|4 pages

Why state-sponsored housing will survive

chapter 45|3 pages

Conclusions