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Housing has been labeled a ‘wicked’ problem: complex, territorial, open-ended and intractable. Housing Politics in the United Kingdom: Power, Planning and Protest underscores the role of politics in generating this ‘wickedness’, highlighting the ‘actors’ involved in the political process and the entrenched territorial electoral politics involved in the ‘housing question’. It concentrates on preparing, disputing and implementing policy rather than on policy outcomes and the social and economic determinants of continuity and change.
Its subtitle reflects the book’s themes. Power is acquired formally through the electoral system but is exercised through a variety of mechanisms, including ‘governmentality’ – the techniques that regulate and order the people’s behaviour. Planning draws attention to attempts to modify the role of markets in housing outcomes and includes land-use planning and the influence of alleged ‘rational’ solutions applied to ‘the housing problem’. Protest concerns the ‘outsiders’ in the political system and their attempts to secure a voice and perhaps eventually become the power-holders.
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