S. Damer, 'Engineers of the human machine': The social practice of council housing management in Glasgow, 1895-1939, URBAN STUD, 37(11), 2000, pp. 2007-2026
In a 1997 paper in Urban Studies, Clapham argued that Housing Studies could
benefit from an injection of social constructionist research, as previous
housing research had been driven by policy-makers. This paper rebuts this a
rgument, demonstrating that such research has been carried out by sociologi
sts of housing in Britain for some 30 years. The paper continues with a det
ailed example of such research, offering a case study of the housing manage
ment of the interwar (1924) Glasgow housing scheme of Hamiltonhill. Marryin
g constructionist and materialist theoretical perspectives, and drawing upo
n a wealth of empirical data, the paper demonstrates that the social practi
ce of council housing management in interwar Glasgow was blatantly aimed at
the social control of public-sector tenants, and that this social control
was firmly located in contemporary class relationships and class ideology.
The paper concludes that such a perspective has considerable potential for
the analysis of current housing management practice.