Gated Communities as Club Goods: Segregation or Social Cohesion?
Authors: Manzi Tony; Smith-Bowers Bill
Source: Housing Studies, Volume 20, Number 2, March, 2005 , pp. 345-359(15)
Abstract:
Gated communities are normally presented in highly negative terms, based on the common assumption that they are a major factor in the intensification of social segregation. In contrast to received wisdom, this paper argues that the theory of club goods can be used to understand gating as a response to both real and perceived issues of crime, vandalism and anti-social behaviour. It is suggested that gating can help to foster social cohesion in an area or neighbourhood by involving a wide spectrum of communities and income groups to create management vehicles which can: reduce crime, protect parked vehicles, increase safety and enhance the local environment by preventing unsolicited entry. Through two case studies, the paper explores how communities struggling with neighbourhood problems including crime are using gating as a way of improving their environment rather than abandoning poorer areas of the city to find a safer home in more residentially segregated affluent neighbourhoods. If housing and planning policy makers are to take seriously a commitment to resident democracy and local participation, such concerns should not be dismissed out of hand as examples of 'isolationism' or 'particularistic consumerist interests'.Keywords: Gated communities; residential segregation; club goods
Document Type: Research article
DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/0267303042000331817
Affiliations: 1: London Research Focus Group University of Westminster, School of Architecture and the Built Environment London UK
Publication date: 2005-03-01
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