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Neighbourhood Image, Reputation and Stigma: Implications for Policy

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Title: Neighbourhood Image, Reputation and Stigma: Implications for Policy


1
Neighbourhood Image, Reputation and Stigma
Implications for Policy
  • John Flint
  • Sheffield Hallam University
  • Tackling Multiple Deprivation in Communities-
  • Considering the Evidence
  • A Scottish Government Conference
  • Edinburgh, 2 June 2009

2
Studies of Stigmatisation 1
  • 'Every city and town in the UK has
    neighbourhoods which have reputations for
    problems such as poverty, crime, drug abuse and
    physical decay'
  • (Hastings and Dean, 2000)

3
Studies of Stigmatisation 2
  • Suttles (1972) mental geographies or urban
    landscapes
  • Residence as a means of performing identity
    (Savage et al., 2005)
  • The poor are increasingly identified by where
    they live (McDowell, 2008)

4
Research Methods
  • Hillside/Primalt NDC area in Knowsley,
    Merseyside.
  • Oxgangs in Edinburgh.
  • JRF study poverty in face of poverty and poverty
    in face of affluence.
  • 60 interviews (non-representative samples).
  • Both relatively deprived Hillside/Primalt more
    deprived but less differentiated than its
    surroundings.

5
The presence of stigmatisation
  • In both areas stigma present
  • General and indefinable
  • "I know its definitely there."
  • Concrete
  • "People say to me where do you live and I say X
    and they go 'Oh my God, poor you.'"
  • "I think it did have a bad reputation
    becausesome seller was driving up, he said to me
    'what's the area like round here, is it still
    full of scalleys"

6
But Differentiation and its Implications
  • Fraser (1996) over generalisation in the
    literature
  • "People in the areas nearby, they're all the
    same."
  • "Its like you go from one bit of Oxgangs,
  • literally you can see the first house in Green
    Bank it's a different world."

7
Differentiation Explanations
  • Immediacy and visibility of difference
  • Sites of interaction
  • Wider urban localities

8
Conclusions
  • Differentiated image and stigma within and
    between neighbourhoods
  • Uniformity versus gradation and hierarchy
  • Linked in complex relationship to perceptions of
    neighbourhood problems, neighbourhood attachment
    and self-esteem
  • Non-spatial comparative elements life
    history/peers

9
Policy Implications
  • Need for more nuanced understanding of stigma,
    including 'ordinariness' and 'hierarchy'
  • Limits of perceptions re neighbourhood problems
    and neighbourhood change
  • Limitations of 'rebranding' exercises
  • Difficulties of social mix (schools etc.)
  • Sense of ownership equally or more important?

10
References
  • Fraser, P. (1996) 'Social and spatial
    relationships and the problem inner city
    Moss-Side in Manchester', Critical Social Policy,
    16, pp. 43- 65.
  • Hastings, A. and Dean, J. (2000) 'Challenging
    Images tackling stigma through estate
    regeneration', Policy and Politics, 31(2), pp.
    171-184.
  • McDowell, L. (2008) 'Thinking Through Class and
    Gender in the Context of Working Class Studies',
    Antipode, pp. 20-30.
  • Savage, M., Bagnall, G. and Longhurst, B. (2005)
    Globalization and belonging, London Sage.
  • Suttles, G.D. (1972) The Social Construction of
    Communities, Chicago University of Chicago Press.
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