City survivors : bringing up children in disadvantaged neighbourhoods

Author(s)

    • Power, Anne
    • Centre for Analysis of Social Exclusion

Bibliographic Information

City survivors : bringing up children in disadvantaged neighbourhoods

Anne Power

(CASE studies on poverty, place, and policy)

Policy Press, 2007

  • pbk.

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Note

Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Seen through the eyes of parents, mainly mothers, "City survivors" tells the eye-opening story of what it is like to bring up children in troubled city neighbourhoods. The book provides a unique insider view on the impact of neighbourhood conditions on family life and explores the prospects for families from the point of view of equality, integration, schools, work, community, regeneration and public services. "City Survivors" is based on yearly visits over seven years to two hundred families living in four highly disadvantaged city neighbourhoods, two in East London and two in Northern inner and outer city areas. Twenty four families, six from each area, explain over time from the inside, how neighbourhoods in and of themselves directly affect family survival. These twenty four stories convey powerful messages from parents about the problems they want tackled, and the things that would help them. The main themes explored in the book are neighbourhood, community, family, parenting, incomes and locals, the need for civic intervention. The book offers original and in-depth, qualitative evidence in a readable and accessible form that will be invaluable to policy-makers, practitioners, university students, academics and general readers interested in the future of families in cities.

Table of Contents

  • Introduction: city survivors
  • Neighbourhoods matter: is it the people or the place?
  • Community matters: survival, instincts in social animals
  • Families matter: mothers carry the weight
  • Parenting matters: pushing for kids
  • Incomers and locals: a shrinking pot?
  • City survival within precarious communities: who pays the price of change?
  • Conclusion: cities need families.

by "Nielsen BookData"

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