Community cohesion in crisis?
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Edited by:
John Flint
and David Robinson
About this book
There is an alleged crisis of cohesion in the UK, manifested in debates about identity and 'Britishness', the breakdown of social connections along the fault lines of geography, ethnicity, faith, income and age, and the fragile relationship between citizen and state. This book examines how these new dimensions of diversity and difference, so often debated in the national context, are emerging at the neighbourhood level. Contributors from a range of disciplinary backgrounds critically assess, and go beyond the limits of, contemporary policy discourses on 'community cohesion' to explore the dynamics of diversity and cohesion within neighbourhoods and to identify new dimensions of disconnection between and within neighbourhoods. The chapters provide theoretically informed critiques of the policy responses of public, private, voluntary and community organisations and present a wealth of new empirical research evidence about the dynamics of cohesion in UK neighbourhoods. Topics covered include new immigration, religion and social capital, faith schools, labour and housing market disconnections, neighbourhood territoriality, information technology and neighbourhood construction, and gated communities. Community cohesion in crisis? will be of interest to academics, policy makers, practitioners and students in the fields of human and urban geography, urban studies, sociology, politics, governance, social policy, criminology and housing studies.
Topics
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Front Matter
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Contents
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List of tables and figures
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Acknowledgements
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Notes on contributors
vi -
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Introduction
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Community cohesion and the politics of communitarianism
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Community cohesion in Bradford: neoliberal integrationism
35 -
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Connectivity of place and housing market change: the case of Birmingham
57 -
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Shifting geographies of minority ethnic settlement: remaking communities in Oldham and Rochdale
81 -
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Employment and disconnection: cultures of worklessness in neighbourhoods
99 -
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Beyond ‘social glue’? ‘Faith’ and community cohesion
119 -
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The third sector and community cohesion in deprived neighbourhoods
139 -
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Welfare state institutions and secessionary neighbourhood spaces
159 -
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New immigration and neighbourhood change
177 -
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Too much cohesion? Young people’s territoriality in Glasgow and Edinburgh
199 -
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Geodemographics and the construction of differentiated neighbourhoods
219 -
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Secession or cohesion? Exploring the impact of gated communities
239 -
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Conclusions
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Index
267