ABSTRACT

Originally published in 1987 and now re-issued with a new preface, this book examines attempts by successive individuals and governments to overcome slum conditions and homelessness, to reform landlord-tenant relations and to provide sound modern dwellings with full amenities for those who need them. Its focus is on how those responsible for public housing concentrated their energies on buildings rather than management, on property rather than people, in sharp distinction to the women who played such an innovative and humanizing role in the early days of housing reform. Efforts to resolve public housing problems are examined in a study of twenty housing estates, and of the initiatives that local authorities have taken to reverse the sometimes overwhelming decay.

part One|115 pages

The Origins of the Housing Service

chapter Chapter One|19 pages

Nineteenth-Century Origins of the Landlord Tradition

chapter Chapter Two|18 pages

The Interwar Years

chapter Chapter Three|26 pages

Postwar Mass Housing

chapter Chapter Four|25 pages

Postwar Housing Departments

chapter Chapter Five|25 pages

Housing for All or Housing of Last Resort?

part Two|66 pages

A Survey of New Housing Problems

chapter Chapter Six|18 pages

The Worst Estates

chapter Chapter Seven|14 pages

The Design of Unpopular Estates

chapter Chapter Eight|14 pages

The Management of Unpopular Estates

Allocations and Empty Property

chapter Chapter Nine|18 pages

Repairs, Rents, Cleansing and Caretaking

part Three|66 pages

Changing the Landlord Tradition

chapter Chapter Ten|32 pages

Local Offices on Unpopular Estates

chapter Chapter Eleven|15 pages

Social Change

chapter Chapter Twelve|17 pages

Summary of Main Themes and Conclusion

A Way Forward