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Council estates: Laurie Taylor explores the concept of the 'sink estate' and hears about an in-depth study of a contemporary housing estate.

Council estates: Laurie Taylor talks to Insa Lee Koch, Associate Professor in Anthropology at LSE, and author of a new study which explores the history of housing estates and the everyday lives of residents on one such estate in southern England. How did council housing turn from being a marker of social inclusion to a marker of abject failure? Also, the origins and symbolism of the ‘sink estate’, a term invented by journalists and amplified by think tanks and politicians. Tom Slater, Professor of Urban Geography at the University of Edinburgh, traces the usage of this term and the long-term impact of associating council estate residents with effluence and sewage. Revised repeat.

Producer: Jayne Egerton

Available now

28 minutes

Last on

Mon 3 Aug 2020 00:15

GUESTS

READING LIST

‘The Invention of the ‘Sink Estate’: Consequential Categorization and the UK Housing Crisis’ by Tom Slater (The Sociological Review, 2018)

‘Personalizing the State: An Anthropology of Law, Politics, and Welfare in Austerity Britain’ by Insa Lee Koch (OUP, 2018)

Broadcasts

  • Wed 9 Oct 2019 16:00
  • Mon 14 Oct 2019 00:15
  • Wed 29 Jul 2020 16:00
  • Mon 3 Aug 2020 00:15

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