Housing, place and community

Harrison, Joseph and Finney, Nissa and Haycox, Hannah and Hill, Emma; Finney, Nissa and Nazroo, James and Bécares, Laia and Kapadia, Dharmi and Shlomo, Natalie, eds. (2023) Housing, place and community. In: Racism and Ethnic Inequality in a Time of Crisis. Bristol University Press, Bristol, pp. 96-118. ISBN 9781447368854 (https://doi.org/10.51952/9781447368861.ch006)

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Abstract

Using the Evidence for Equality National Survey (EVENS), this chapter demonstrates how ethnic minority groups in Britain are subject to material deprivation in residential experience, yet succeed in developing strong local attachment and enriching this during times of crisis. It presents evidence on ethnic inequalities in housing type, overcrowding, multigenerational living, access to greenspace and residential mobility, with attention to variation within Britain and ethnic groups that are absent from other studies (such as Roma and Gypsy Traveller). It finds, for example, that spatial pressure in households is more prevalent among all ethnic minority groups compared to White British people. This is a notable concern for three-generation households, which are particularly common in the Pakistani and Roma ethnic groups. Despite housing deprivation, analyses of local belonging point to community mechanisms and networks of solidarity being mobilised during the COVID-19 pandemic in diverse neighbourhoods.