by Dick Atkinson (Author)
Civil Renewal: "Mending the Hole in the Social Ozone Layer," explains that for 40 years successive governments have initiated wave after wave of costly urban renewal schemes to try to improve the conditions which blight so many lives in up to 3,000 neighbourhoods. Yet, success has been elusive and only a very few neighbourhoods have made real progress. 'Civil Renewal' asks why this has been the case. It suggests that while the motives of those leading the initiatives were fine, the culture which shaped their attitude was flawed. So, they tried to redistribute wealth and felt that physical renewal projects would result in sustainable success. Thus, they failed to see that the problem lay not just in material but in social poverty and that the bonds which once tied people together in mutual support had loosened and can no longer support self-help activities. There really is a hole in the social ozone layer. Unless it is repaired renewal is not possible and even costly initiatives will fail. Thus, it shows how people-led renewal can make progress. Indeed, if residents in the few successfully renewing neighbourhoods can act as 'consultants' to less confident residents in failing neighbourhoods, perhaps a series of regional programmes of neighbourhood renewal can take place? Can the powers that be move from 'doing' and 'delivering' to 'enabling' and 'facilitating' and initiate a culture changing debate so that local people come to own the process of renewal and ensure that it becomes sustainable?
Format: Paperback
Pages: 144
Publisher: Brewin Books
Published: Jan 2005
ISBN 10: 1858582679
ISBN 13: 9781858582672