 
      The Labour Party, Housing and Urban Transformation
In Place of Squalor
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Product details:
- Publisher Bloomsbury Academic
- Date of Publication 11 December 2025
- Number of Volumes Paperback
- ISBN 9781350423657
- Binding Paperback
- No. of pages pages
- Size 234x156 mm
- Language English
- Illustrations 10 bw illus 700
Categories
Long description:
The Labour Party, Housing and Urban Transformation explores how the urban transformation of Britain between 1945 and 1970 was understood politically by the Labour Party. Placing the Labour Party at the centre of the discussion, the book covers the most extensive period of state-led urban change in British history, from the end of the Second World War to the decline of high modernism in the late 1960s. Taking a particular focus on housing to explore the implementation of modernist ideas to drive a far-ranging process of urban transformation in Britain, it challenges conventional understandings of Labour's urban legacy and puts political ideas at the heart of twentieth-century change.
Utilising a breadth and range of material, including two distinct sets of archival sources, published secondary material, national legislation and Housing Acts, and various case studies, Child moves seamlessly between the national picture and its local impacts. It also draws from sources which had a crucial influence on political thinking throughout the mid-twentieth century to understand how urban transformation represented for Labour a political vision of the future. A timely contribution both to urban history and to the history of post-war Britain, it challenges existing interpretations of modernism, connects urban change to the political ideas that drove it, and allows us to comprehend the state of urban Britain today.
Table of Contents:
Introduction 
Chapter 1: Abominations of squalor: slum clearance in Labour thought
Chapter 2: Down with the old, up with the new: Labour and urban planning
Chapter 3: 'An elementary social need': reconstructing housing for the twentieth century
Chapter 4: Workers' cottages and tall towns: class, community and the modern home
Afterword
Bibliography