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April 30, 2008

Migration and economic segregation reports from ippr

Floodgates or turnstiles? Post-EU enlargement migration flows to (and from) the UK

Mapmig Fresh evidence on the scale and nature of migration from the eight new Central and Eastern European countries that joined the EU in 2004 and, to a lesser extent, from Romania and Bulgaria, which joined in 2007.

A Tale of Two Cities: Neighbourhood segregation by income in two urban case studies

Policy and economic drivers interact with the processes of income segregation at different spatial scales. This research, from ippr, focuses on the processes at the local level. In particular, it explores the relationship between a neighbourhood’s income profile, and the housing market.

April 09, 2008

Lectures mark Temple anniversary

Wtf A series of nationwide events has been announced to  celebrate the 60th anniversary of the
William Temple Foundation.

13th May The demise of Prophecy or Reinventing Governance? – Faith and the Welfare State Dr Francis Davis at University of Manchester, Lecture Theatre A7 16.00

Download ronald_preston_lecture.pdf

25th June Economics in a postscarcity age – the contribution of faith and economics
Dr John Atherton at Church House, London, Room 3 – 16.00

5th November From Welfare State to Welfare Society – the contribution of faiths to happiness and wellbeing in a pluralised civil society Rt Revd & Rt Hon Dr Rowan Williams  at St James Church, Piccadilly, London   17.00

March 22, 2008

SUCCESS AND THE CITY

Learning from International Urban Policy

Latest Policy Exchange report

Logo "Collectively, the message from these cities is clear: the most successful have the powers and ambition to initiate change, the freedoms to think and be innovative with policy, and the mechanisms to hold local change to account. Giving cities powers alone, however, cannot buck geography. The most successful also benefit strongly from their location, size and accessibility, and these are sometimes difficult areas to bring within the bounds of policy."

March 12, 2008

REGENERATION: PEOPLE & PLACE MATTER

Neighbourhood identity: people, place and time

Est Report from the Joseph Rowntree Foundation finds: “How communities are planned, then established, sets a physical and social template that has a long and sustained impact on neighbourhood identities. Crucially, this study has shown how place identity can act against the stated ambitions of renewal projects and cause social segregation.”

"Regeneration does not happen overnight..."

Marsh A £50m regeneration scheme changed little, say residents of a deprived estate, so this time they want to do things their way. Guardian report on Marsh Farm, Luton.

February 27, 2008

REINVIGORATING COMMUNITY

The Power of Place

Best Richard Best's presentation to the Smith Institute raises critical questions about housing and regeneration policy as he emphasises the importance of an understanding of place as policy makers seek to tackle the giants of Want (or poverty), Disease, Idleness (or worklessness), Squalor and Ignorance.

MIGRANTS: mapping, marginality & the metropole

Esrc Mobile masculinities: Men, migration and low paid work in London

The latest paper from the Global Cities at Work programme.

Also available online:  Brazilians in London. A report for the Strangers into Citizens Campaign.

MuteShow Invisibles? migration / data / work

The latest edition of Mute examines invisibility, the campaign for a migrant amnesty, and the attempts to 'destroy the legal and informational grey zones in which the poor shelter and organise'.

A controversial and stimulating read!

"An amnesty might represent a real and substantial gain for migrant communities and a limited number of individuals, but at the cost of the re-inscription of life into the state and the legitimisation of the state's role in managing the tension between, and circulation across, borders and boundaries."

February 19, 2008

IJPT - Urban special

Public Theology and the City: Urban Theology as Public Theology

Ijpt A special issue of the International Journal for Public Theology - articles by Elaine Graham, Peter Scott, Tim Gorringe, Andrew Davey, Tanja Winkler and Sigurd Bergman.

Available through Online edition or Subscription 

February 01, 2008

Reinvigorating Community

Richard Best on The Power of Place

Brist_002  A Smith Institute lecture  delivered by Lord Richard Best who will draw on his wide experience to debate the key challenges around housing, regeneration, and social exclusion.
Admission free. Limited number of spaces available.  To request a place email bestlecture@smith-institute.org.uk

Also available from Smith Institute Real Localism edited by David Walker.

'...the task now for local government is not to talk up the case for localism, but to prove to central government and their local community that they deserve more powers and the resources that go with it.'

December 20, 2007

Global port cities under threat

Guardian Unlimited Photo essay

Kolkatta New research aims to pinpoint which cities are most reliant on adequate flood defences, and investigates how climate change is likely to impact each port city’s exposure to coastal flooding by the 2070s, taking into account socio-economic factors such as population growth and urbanisation.

November 21, 2007

City Survivors

Anne Power: Guardian Society Profile

Annep Activist and writer tells Lynsey Hanley that shortsighted urban housing developments dominated by one- and two-bed apartments are breaking up communities by driving poorer families out of the inner city

"Families are the litmus test of whether a city is really working. If a city isn't working for families it's very, very difficult to make the city work."

Anne Power's City Survivors: Bringing Up Children in Disadvantaged Neighbourhoods is published by Policy Press. See books column.

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