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Featured researches published by Maureen Rhoden.


International Journal of Sociology and Social Policy | 2006

Children, housing and health

Jill Stewart; Maureen Rhoden

Purpose – To consolidate and review current literature that relates childrens health to their housing and living environments.Design/methodology/approach – A range of published sources which review the relationship between children, housing and health. The sources consolidate research that applies specifically to children and their domestic situation. The paper also reviews literature around municipal tower block estates and the unique health/architecture relationship before turning to children living in temporary bed and breakfast accommodation. An overview of current public health policy that seeks to reintegrate housing and well‐being is undertaken.Findings – Decent housing lies at the heart of health for all. Generally, the picture is more positive, but action remains slow. Childrens needs must be given a higher priority in housing in future to promote physical and emotional well‐being.Research limitations/implications – It is not an exhaustive list and the sources are mainly UK publications.Practic...


Journal of The Royal Society for The Promotion of Health | 2003

A review of social housing regeneration in the London Borough of Brent.

Jill Stewart; Maureen Rhoden

Council high-rise estates sprang up rapidly during the 1960s and 1970s, with cross-governmental support to resolve the nation’s housing crisis. It soon became apparent that many such new estates, designed by remote architects, and sometimes constructed rapidly and unsatisfactorily, did not provide the ideal living initially perceived. Many estates had early problems with architecture, construction and design. They proved an inhumane environment for many residents and there were frequent problems with communal features. Such estates were soon stigmatised and difficult to let as increasingly residual households were placed there, creating majority welfare-dependent estates. This created a downward spiral that traditional, and remote, housing management found difficult to address, and was too wide-scale to rectify financially within existing regimes. Prior to the 1980s, there were no specific government policies to tackle housing regeneration on high-rise estates. Problems became wider than traditional housing management and poor housing environments, encompassing social and economic exclusion. This paper, based on historical and contemporary literature as well as estate visits, reviews regeneration policy in three council housing estates within the London Borough of Brent. It traces successive government approaches since the 1980s from one that challenged the very status of council housing - notably at Stonebridge Park and Chalkhill, to one of partnership with the local authority - at South Kilburn. Housing policy is now concerned with more than just housing - it is about moving toward social inclusion, which requires initiative, flair, resource and commitment. It is about new accountabilities - not just numbers of bricks and mortar constructions, but about the lives, opportunities and health of those who live in an area. This fundamentally involves a partnership approach with residents at the centre of regeneration. This paper finds that sustainable estate regeneration policies are about continued improvements in both housing policy and social development.


Property Management | 2009

“Buy to let”: a popular investment?

Paul Mellish; Maureen Rhoden

Purpose – The UK “buy to let” property market is significant with over 1,024,300 “buy to let” mortgages outstanding between 1996 and 2007. This paper investigates whether the factors that encourage male and female individuals to invest in the “buy to let” property market are similar or different.Design/methodology/approach – The research is conducted through a quantitative study which examines whether the advantages outweigh the disadvantages for landlords investing in the “buy to let” housing market and if these issues are perceived to be the same by male and female landlords. Through a literature review the research author critically evaluates books, papers and legislation to establish the current background information which exists on the “buy to let” market. The primary research contained within this paper is conducted through a survey questionnaire distributed to 100 landlords attending private sector landlord forums.Findings – This paper recognises that overall male and female landlords have differi...


Archive | 2017

Housing Policy: An Introduction

Paul Balchin; Maureen Rhoden


Archive | 1998

Housing: the essential foundations

Paul Balchin; Maureen Rhoden


Archive | 1998

Housing policy and finance

Paul Balchin; David Isaac; Maureen Rhoden


Archive | 2008

Partnering for repairs and maintenance services

Ellen Osei-Mensah; Maureen Rhoden; David Isaac


Archive | 2013

Beside the seaside: perceptions from the 'front line' on the support needs of families living in the private-rented sector in Margate

Jill Stewart; Maureen Rhoden; Anneyce Knight; Nevin Mehmet; Lynn Baxter


Archive | 2014

Blue space and wellbeing

Anneyce Knight; Jill Stewart; Maureen Rhoden; Nevin Mehmet; Lynn Baxter


Archive | 2011

Hotel or home at the seaside? Challenges and opportunities for family wellbeing

Jill Stewart; Anneyce Knight; Nevin Mehmet; Maureen Rhoden

Collaboration


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Jill Stewart

University of Greenwich

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Nevin Mehmet

University of Greenwich

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David Isaac

University of Greenwich

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L James Valverde

London School of Economics and Political Science

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Nick Morton

University of Birmingham

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Max Craglia

University of Sheffield

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