ABSTRACT

Evictions in the UK examines the relationships between tenants, landlords, housing providers and government agencies and the tensions and conflicts that characterise these relations. The book shows how power dynamics are being reconfigured in the post-welfare context of the first quarter of the 21st century, as evictions for rent arrears are becoming one of the most significant threats to both the wellbeing of the social housing sector and the welfare of its tenants.

Embracing both practical and critical approaches, this book offers a comprehensive understanding of the contradictory and thus controversial issue of evictions. It explores the range of perspectives involved in the practice – landlords carrying out evictions, those agencies providing legal assistance to evictees, as well as academics and institutions charged with researching and regulating the process. Drawing on three case studies relating to evictions across Scotland and England, this book provides a comprehensive look at the punitive consequences of poverty (evictions for rent arrears) and status (evictions under immigration law) that are applicable to social housing systems worldwide. Based on original, primary-source data, this book will be a key resource for academics and students as well as policy makers and practitioners in the fields of housing studies, planning, social welfare, and political sociology.

part I|45 pages

The World of Housing

chapter 1|13 pages

Evictions

Reflections from the Front Line

chapter 2|16 pages

The Legal and Regulatory Context

chapter 3|14 pages

A Political Economy of Housing in the UK

part II|50 pages

The People of Housing

part III|67 pages

The Practice of Housing

chapter 7|20 pages

Constructing a Theoretical Model

chapter 8|16 pages

The Parallax of Professional Practice

chapter 9|13 pages

Power, Housing and Politics

chapter 10|16 pages

What Are the Alternatives to Eviction?