The ‘Responsible’ Tenant and the Problem of Apathy
- 1 January 2009
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Social Policy and Society
- Vol. 8 (1) , 25-36
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s1474746408004557
Abstract
In the last decade, the UK New Labour government has emphasised tenant participation in housing policy. Consequently, those individuals who decide to opt out of participation processes have been problematised as ‘apathetic’, and identified as needing to be ‘empowered’ through professional interventions. Drawing on research about community ownership in Glasgow, this paper argues that tenants' reasons for not getting involved are more than simply lack of interest. Tenants articulated an instrumental approach to participation, and rejected the conflation of tenant participation with tenant management. Practical barriers also obstructed their latent motivation.Keywords
This publication has 27 references indexed in Scilit:
- Transforming Scotland's Public-sector Housing through Community Ownership: The Reterritorialisation of Housing Governance?Space and Polity, 2008
- The Paradox of Tenant Empowerment: Regulatory and Liberatory PossibilitiesHousing, Theory and Society, 2008
- Responsible Participation and Housing: Restoring Democratic Theory to the SceneHousing Studies, 2008
- Tenant Participation and Social Housing in the UK: Applying a Theoretical ModelHousing Studies, 2007
- 'Just because we are amateurs doesn't mean we aren't professional': the importance of expert activists in tenant participationPublic Administration, 2005
- Community governance and democracyPolicy & Politics, 2005
- Making sense of social citizenship: some user views on welfare rights and responsibilitiesCritical Social Policy, 2002
- Making sense of social citizenship: some user views on welfare rights and responsibilitiesCritical Social Policy, 2002
- Doing The Right Thing: Labour’s Attempt to Forge a New Welfare Deal Between the Individual and the StateSocial Policy & Administration, 1999
- Empowerment through ResidenceHousing Studies, 1998