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How to Build Houses and Save the Countryside

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England has a housing crisis. We need to build many more new homes to house our growing population, but house building is controversial, particularly when it involves the loss of countryside. Addr...
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  • 14 April 2018
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England has a housing crisis. We need to build many more new homes to house our growing population, but house building is controversial, particularly when it involves the loss of countryside.

Addressing both sides of this critical debate, Shaun Spiers argues that to drive house building on the scale needed, government must strike a contract with civil society: in return for public support and acceptance of the loss of some countryside, it must guarantee high quality, affordable developments, in the right locations. Simply imposing development, as recent governments of all political persuasions have attempted, will not work.

Focusing on house building and conservation politics in England, Spiers uses his considerable experience and extensive research to demonstrate why the current model doesn’t work, and why there needs to be both planning reform and a more active role for the state, including local government.

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Price: $16.95
Pages: 136
Publisher: Bristol University Press
Imprint: Policy Press
Publication Date: 14 April 2018
ISBN: 9781447339991
Format: Paperback
BISACs: POLITICAL SCIENCE / Public Policy / City Planning & Urban Development, Rural communities / rural life, POLITICAL SCIENCE / Public Policy / Regional Planning, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Sociology / Rural, Political structure and processes, Social impact of environmental issues
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Shaun Spiers was Chief Executive of the Campaign to Protect Rural England (CPRE) from 2004 to 2017. Founded in 1926, CPRE ‘campaigns for a beautiful and living countryside’. Before joining CPRE, Shaun was Chief Executive of ABCUL, the credit union trade association, and from 1994 to 1999 he was MEP for London South East. He is currently executive director of the environmental think-tank, Green Alliance.

How to think about housing and planning;

The housing crisis;

Rural Housing;

Environmental constraints;

Political constraints;

Structural constraints;

Solutions;

Challenge.