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Cover East Enders

East Enders

Family and community in East London

Restricted access
Authors:
Katharine Mumford
and
Anne Power

This moving book about the lives of families in London’s East End gives important new insights into neighbourhood relations (including race relations), through the eyes of the local community. Using an up-to-date account of life in East London, the authors illustrate how cities faced with neighbourhoods in decline are changing.

Publisher:
Policy Press
Publication Date:
14 May 2003
Online ISBN:
9781847425690
Series:
CASE Studies on Poverty, Place and Policy
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.51952/9781847425690
Restricted access
  • Table of Contents
  • Description
  • Author/Editor Details
  • Book Information
Front Matter
Front Matter
One: Getting the inside view
Two: Investigating neighbourhood life
Part 1: Community and race relations
Three: Community spirit
Four: Race and community relations in changing multi-ethnic neighbourhoods
Part 2: Mothers in work or at home?
Five: Families and work: mothers in paid work
Six: Families and work: mothers at home
Part 3: Neighbourhood conditions – the threat of breakdown
Seven: Managing neighbourhood conditions and services
Eight: Parks and open spaces
Nine: Disorder in the neighbourhoods: families’ experiences of crime, gangs, neighbour problems, vandalism, graffiti, drugs and ‘rough’ behaviour
Part 4: How change affects families
Ten: Changing places: the families and their neighbourhoods
Eleven: Conclusions
Back Matter
References
Interviewees
Characteristics of the neighbourhoods, families interviewed, and comparisons with local authority, regional and national averages
Neighbourhood selection – links to the ‘12 Areas Study’
Mothers’ work patterns in different work trajectories
Career histories of all non-working interviewees
The circumstances of the mothers at home who did not want paid work
The kind of paid work that the mothers and one lone father wanted
Index

This moving book about the lives of families in London’s East End gives important new insights into neighbourhood relations (including race relations), through the eyes of the local community. What hope is there of change?

Using an up-to-date account of life in East London, the authors illustrate how cities faced with neighbourhoods in decline are changing.

East Enders:

· gives a bird’s eye view of neighbourhood problems and assets;

· provides policy recommendations based on real life experiences;

· tackles topical issues such as race relations, mothers and work, urban revival and social disorder through the eyes of families;

· is authored by leading experts in community studies.

Undergraduate and postgraduate students in social policy, sociology, anthropology, urban studies, child development, geography, housing and public administration should all read this book. Policy makers in national and local government, practitioners and community workers in towns and cities and general readers interested in the life and history of urban neighbourhoods will also find this book an invaluable source of information.

Katharine Mumford, until recently, was a Research Officer at the Centre for Analysis of Social Exclusion at the London School of Economics and Political Science.

Anne Power is Professor of Social Policy at the London School of Economics and Political Science. She was awarded a CBE in June 2000 for services to regeneration and resident participation.

Author/Editor details at time of book publication.

Copyright:
© Katharine Mumford and Anne Power 2003
Hardback ISBN:
9781861344960
Paperback ISBN:
9781861344977
Online ISBN:
9781847425690
Page Extent:
328
Keywords:
neighbourhood; family life; social disorder; community spirit; deprived areas; major regeneration; social conditions; East London; policy recommendations; race relations
Global Social Challenges:
Poverty, Inequality and Social Justice
Sustainable Development Goals:
Goal 5: Gender Equality
Subject:
Community Development, Urban Communities, Social Work, Social Work
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