This presentation examines why we need to rethink the idea of regeneration, including the role of social housing and the nature of 'work' to create real value for people in disadvantaged neighbourhoods. It looks at the idea of coproduction and argues for an 'urban acupuncture' approach with small, significant interventions.
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Regeneration in a cold climate: from policy change to behaviour change
1. Regeneration in a cold climate
From policy change to behaviour change
2. Why we canât
leave it to the
government
âRegeneration to Enable Growth gives us
little conïŹdence that the government has
a clear strategy for addressing the
countryâs regeneration needs. It lacks
strategic direction and is unclear about
the nature of the problem it is trying to
solve.â
House of Commons communities and local government
committee
3. Why we canât leave it to the experts
â...the challenge now is to maximise the numbers and
minimise the price. Although the scale is different, the
ânumbers gameâ which led directly to the housing disasters
of the sixties is being played again, this time by housing
associations instead of councils.â
David Page, Building for Communities, 1993
4. 5 public service
models that
wonât work any
more
1 The Olympian god
2 The Fat Controller
3 The Philanthropist
4 The Revolutionary
5 The Wagon Circle
5. 7 foundations
for strong
communities
1 Affordable, decent and safe homes
2 Good physical and mental health
3 Clean and healthy neighbourhoods
4 Satisfying work, paid or voluntary
5 Good relationships
6 Feeling those you care about are safe
7 Access to communal and green spaces
(source: Oxfam Humankind Index)
6. Coproduction:
a model for
hard times
âThe medicine of kindness, the salve of
co-operation and the tonic of prideâ
Mary Clear, Incredible Edible Todmorden
âThe key to it is be right with folk, and I
always think in life that if youâre right
with folk then theyâll be right with youâ
Peter Beck, housing manager, Kirklees
7. Coproduction:
time to get out
of the silo
âPublic services that rest on an equal and
reciprocal relationship between
professionals, people using services, their
families and neighboursâ
Public Services Inside Out (Boyle, Slay and Stephens,
2010)
8. Coproduction:
Itâs the people,
stupid
(not âitâs the
stupid peopleâ)
âWe cannot control what will happen if we
unleash the potential of real people in real
communities, but we have to do itâ
Martin Simon, Timebanking UK
11. Coproduction:
building a sense
of agency
âA composer can have all the talent of
Mozart and a passionate desire to
succeed, but if he believes that he cannot
compose music, he will come to nothingâ
Martin Seligman, Learned Optimism
12. Why
coproduction
means
rethinking
housing
1 Housing as a foundation for
community: from bricks and mortar to
learning, work, health and hopes
2 Housing as an anchor of place: putting
down roots and building networks
3 Housing as a stepping stone: an
opportunity to build skills, conïŹdence
and standing
13. Why
coproduction
means
rethinking
work
1 The value created within communities is
often fashioned outside the workplace
2 Work is not always a route out of
poverty: 61% of children in poverty have
working parents
3 Insecure and precarious work damages
communities. Zero-hours or commission-
only contracts can harm physical and
mental health
15. Story 1: WECH
âIf more places were like WECH there
would be more happinessâ
Local resident, 2010
âFor nearly a decade WECH has housed a
police ofïŹcer as a tenant in exchange for
him playing a role in community affairsâ
WECH report, 2010
16. Story 2:
Taff Housing
â[Public services] are no longer looking
inwards so obsessively towards targets
and procedures, but they ïŹnd themselves
looking increasingly outwards at the local
neighbourhood to create supportive social
networks...â
David Boyle, The Human Element, 2011
17. Story 3:
Fresh
Horizons,
Huddersfield
âNone of the people who apply for a post
here had ever thought to apply for a local
authority post. What we do is look for the
potential in people rather than their track
recordâ
Mike McCusker, chief executive, Fresh Horizons
18. Why small
makes sense
âWhen a parent takes a child swimming or
to the park they donât think of it as a
diversion from crime. They think of it as
fun, part of a happy childhoodâ
David Robinson, Community Links
19. Urban
acupuncture:
small is
bountiful
âCities have the capability of providing
something for everybody, only because,
and only when, they are created by
everybodyâ
Jane Jacobs, The Death and Life of Great American Cities
23. âDonât ossify,
occupyâ - an
old slogan for
new times
âą Occupy the debate: get involved
âą Occupy the space: animate whatâs
empty
âą Occupy the attention: become a shop
window for hope
24. Thank you
More from me:
âą my website: urbanpollinators.co.uk
âą on Twitter: @urbanpollinator
âą my blog: Living with Rats