Exploring Change in Local Regeneration Areas: Evidence from the New Deal for Communities Programme in England

For many years, United Kingdom governments have instigated urban regeneration schemes. The 1998–2011 New Deal for Communities Programme was designed to change 39 deprived English areas, with regard to place-based, and people-based outcomes. Change data for all NDC areas from a common base-line can b...

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Veröffentlicht in:Urban studies (Edinburgh, Scotland) Scotland), 2013-04, Vol.50 (5), p.942-958
Hauptverfasser: Lawless, Paul, Beatty, Christina
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Beatty, Christina
description For many years, United Kingdom governments have instigated urban regeneration schemes. The 1998–2011 New Deal for Communities Programme was designed to change 39 deprived English areas, with regard to place-based, and people-based outcomes. Change data for all NDC areas from a common base-line can be used to establish relative rates of change across these neighbourhoods. Three sets of factors might help to explain why some areas saw more change than others: NDC Partnership-level activities; characteristics of NDC areas; and the wider local authority context. Results suggest that little change can be attributed to the characteristics or activities of NDC Partnerships themselves. This raises questions relating to the ability of regeneration schemes to instigate positive change, the limited nature of people-based change, the perverse role of educational spend and differential change across clusters of deprived areas.
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source PAIS Index; SAGE Complete; Sociological Abstracts; JSTOR Archive Collection A-Z Listing
subjects Ability
Attitude change
Authority
Bgi / Prodig
Changes
Collaboration
Communities
Correlation coefficients
Disadvantaged
England
Europe
Evidence
Health outcomes
Housing
Intervention
Local communities
Local government
Metropolitan areas
Neighborhoods
Neighbourhoods
New Deal
Partnership
Redevelopment, Urban
Regional studies
Socioeconomics
The British Isles
United Kingdom
Urban Renewal
Urban studies
title Exploring Change in Local Regeneration Areas: Evidence from the New Deal for Communities Programme in England
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