dot
dot
Search
 
 
United Kingdom
Home eukn.org
 
Home > E-library > Urban Policy > The National Strategy for Neighbourhood R...
 
Print pageContactSitemap
-
  • E-library
  • News
  • Meetings
  • About EUKN
  • Partners
-
-
-
Cases

Community planning...Local Area Agreeme...Making it meaningf...
Researches
State of European ...Exemplars of neigh...New evaluated Manc...more
Planning together:...Thames Gateway evi...State of the Engli...Alternative approa...LSP learning progr...Generic skills and...Seeing the light: ...

Policies

Leipzig Charter on...A century for citi...Greater London Aut...more
People and place: ...The 'how to' guide...National Urban Pol...Sustainable commun...Sustainable commun...2001 Progress revi...Our towns and citi...

Networks

Leaders Network
-
-
The National Strategy for Neighbourhood Renewal – four years on

Introduction
Reviews progress four years after the government launched its long-term National Strategy for Neighbourhood Renewal.
Description
This report:
  • reviews progress four years after the government launched its long-term strategy for neighbourhood renewal;
  • discusses the six key themes in the strategy (education, worklessness, health, crime and anti-social behaviour, housing and the prevention of homelessness, and liveability) and explains the key programmes and actions which have been used to deliver in each area;
  • considers the early evidence on what works, and looks at the use of floor targets to encourage improvement; and
  • discusses the long-term challenges that remain.
Background information
The publication was written to report progress against the aims set out in the National Strategy for Neighbourhood Renewal, launched in January 2001, to demonstrate, through evidence, the progress made in neighbourhoods and to provide an overview of current policy and programme priorities. The report draws together findings from various reviews carried out within the ODPM and elsewhere. In particular, it draws on two major reports – a joint review with the Prime Minister’s Strategy Unit on deprived neighbourhoods, 'Improving the prospects of people living in areas of multiple deprivation in England' (2005) and the Social Exclusion Unit report 'Breaking the Cycle: taking stock of progress and priorities' (September 2004). Also uses illustrative examples of projects.
Methodology
Reviews progress four years after the government launched its long-term National Strategy for Neighbourhood Renewal.
Conclusions
Concludes that progress has been made, structures are in place to renew neighbourhoods, and that the gap is narrowing between the poorest neighbourhoods and the rest of the country, but that there is still much more to do.
Contact info
Neighbourhood Renewal Unit, Office of the Deputy Prime Minister
Phone: +44 8450 82 83 83
neighbourhoodrenewal@odpm.gsi.gov.uk
Publication date
31/01/2005
Project finished
//
Researcher
Neighbourhood Renewal Unit, Office of the Deputy Prime Minister (ODPM)
Links
Neighbourhood Renewal UnitOffice of the Deputy Prime Minister (now Department for Communities and Local Government)

Making it happen in neighbourhoods. The National Strategy for Neighbourhood Renewal – four years on (PDF, Eng, 1.7MB)

Document type
research
Themes
Urban Policy
Keywords
, Urban environment
 


  dot
Copyright-Masthead-Disclaimer-PrivacydotRSS feed