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Excluding exceptions: Housing non-affordability and the oppression of environmental sustainability?
Institution:1. Department of Geography, Kings College London, Strand, London WC2R 2LS, UK;2. Department of Geography, University of Reading, Whiteknights, Reading, RG6 6AB, UK;1. Keble College, Parks Road, Oxford OX1 3PG, UK;2. School of Geography, Earth and Environmental Sciences, Plymouth University Portland Square, Drake Circus, Plymouth PL4 8AA, UK
Abstract:This paper explores the provision of homes for less wealthy households in rural England. By allowing ‘exceptions’ to UK planning law to provide low-income housing for local residents, the national government seeks to secure dwellings for the less wealthy and so sustain socially mixed rural villages. This paper explores how the production of homes through the exception policy is not conducive to the construction of many new houses. The particular emphasis in the paper is on how responsible agents are discouraged from being more active in erecting new village homes for low-income households. Empirically, the paper draws on documents, interviews and a social survey in the counties of Bedfordshire, Cambridgeshire and Norfolk to investigate the process of delivering rural exception homes. It is concluded that, despite Government assertions that a socially mixed countryside is desirable, the decision-making criteria that dominate the worldviews of agents in social housing provision work against this outcome.
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