Transforming Scotland's Public-sector Housing through Community Ownership: The Reterritorialisation of Housing Governance?
- 2 July 2008
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Space and Polity
- Vol. 12 (2) , 183-196
- https://doi.org/10.1080/13562570802173265
Abstract
In recent decades, UK public-sector housing has increasingly been problematised, with government solutions focusing on modernising the sector by transferring ownership of the housing from the public to the voluntary sector through stock transfer. This promises to transform the organisation of social housing by devolving control from local government to housing organisations located within, and governed by, the communities in which they are based. The Scottish Executive's national housing policy of community ownership is the epitome of this governmental rationale par excellence. Drawing upon empirical research on the 2003 Glasgow housing stock transfer, this paper argues that, whilst community ownership is underpinned by governmental rationales that seek to establish community as the new territory of social housing governance, the realisation of these political ambitions has been marred by emergent central–local conflict. Paradoxically, the fragmentation of social housing through the break-up of municipal provision, co-exists with continued political centralisation within the state apparatus.Keywords
This publication has 17 references indexed in Scilit:
- Community Ownership in Glasgow: The Devolution of Ownership and Control, or a Centralizing Process?European Journal of Housing Policy, 2007
- Community Participation in the Real World: Opportunities and Pitfalls in New Governance SpacesUrban Studies, 2007
- Having it All? Housing Reform Under DevolutionHousing Studies, 2006
- Housing Stock Transfer in Birmingham and Glasgow: The Contrasting Experiences of Two UK CitiesEuropean Journal of Housing Policy, 2005
- Sovereignty, biopolitics and the local government of crime in BritainTheoretical Criminology, 2005
- Reconfiguring Agency and Responsibility in the Governance of Social Housing in ScotlandUrban Studies, 2004
- Community, Citizenship, and the Third WayPublished by SAGE Publications ,2001
- Governmentality and Rights and Responsibilities in Urban PolicyEnvironment and Planning A: Economy and Space, 2000
- Beyond histories of the presentEconomy and Society, 1998
- Direct Democracy in Practice: the case of ‘Community Ownership’ housing associationsPolicy & Politics, 1996