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Bringing Home the Housing Crisis

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Often portrayed as an apolitical space, this book demonstrates that home is in fact a highly political concept, with a range of groups in society excluded from a ‘right to home’ under current UK po...
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  • 30 May 2023
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Often portrayed as an apolitical space, this book demonstrates that home is in fact a highly political concept, with a range of groups in society excluded from a ‘right to home’ under current UK policies.

Drawing on resident interviews and analysis of political and media attitudes across three case studies – the criminalisation of squatting, the bedroom tax and family homelessness – the book explores the ways in which legislative and policy changes dismantle people’s rights to secure, decent and affordable housing by framing them as undeserving.

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Price: $38.95
Pages: 158
Publisher: Bristol University Press
Imprint: Policy Press
Publication Date: 30 May 2023
ISBN: 9781447361862
Format: Paperback
BISACs: SOCIAL SCIENCE / Poverty & Homelessness, Housing and homelessness, POLITICAL SCIENCE / Public Policy / Social Policy, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Human Geography, Urban and municipal planning and policy, Urban communities / city life
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Mel Nowicki is Reader in Urban Geography at Oxford Brookes University.

Introduction

1. The politicisation of home

2. The bedroom tax and diminishing rights to home

3. Temporary is the new permanent: temporary accommodation policy and the rise of family homelessness

4. The criminalisation of home: section 144 and its impact on London’s squatters

5. Fighting for home: activism and resistance in precarious times

Conclusion