Originally published in 1987 this book examines attempts by successive
individuals and governments to overcome slum conditions and
homelessness, to reform landlord-tenant relations and to provide sound
modern dwellings with full amenities for those who need them. Its focus
is on how those responsible for public housing concentrated their
energies on buildings rather than management, on property rather than
people, in sharp distinction to the women who played such an innovative
and humanizing role in the early days of housing reform. Efforts to
resolve public housing problems are examined in a study of twenty
housing estates, and of the initiatives that local authorities have
taken to reverse the sometimes overwhelming decay.