Neighbourhood Renewal: an effective way to address social inclusion

Abstract People who live in disadvantaged communities are at increased risk of social exclusion through diminished access and quality of services, lack of opportunity and feeling powerless over decisions relating to their neighbourhoods. Neighbourhood Renewal (NR) is a Victorian State Government ini...

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Main Authors: Margaret Shield, Melissa Graham, Ann Taket
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Griffith University 2011-11-01
Series:Journal of Social Inclusion
Online Access:https://josi.journals.griffith.edu.au/index.php/inclusion/article/view/164
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spelling doaj-6a4e268eb7954735b2b7e7e1651678122020-11-25T01:34:36ZengGriffith UniversityJournal of Social Inclusion1836-88082011-11-0122418149Neighbourhood Renewal: an effective way to address social inclusionMargaret ShieldMelissa GrahamAnn TaketAbstract People who live in disadvantaged communities are at increased risk of social exclusion through diminished access and quality of services, lack of opportunity and feeling powerless over decisions relating to their neighbourhoods. Neighbourhood Renewal (NR) is a Victorian State Government initiative that seeks to address this. This paper presents the findings from two individual project sites, side-by-side. Data were collected in 2004/5 and 2009 using face-to-face interviewing with convenience samples of 900 NR residents across the two NR sites at each time period. A comparison group for each NR site consisted of a sample of 150 people living in the same suburb or town but outside the NR site, data were collected by telephone. Data were analysed separately for each NR project site. Findings indicate that neighbourhood renewal strategies can be effective in improving trust in government, perceptions of community participation, influence and control over community decisions and improved services. Community level strategies are valuable in addressing area-level determinants to improve social inclusion. The successes of the NR scheme support the implementation and continuation of area-specific interventions to address disadvantage and social exclusion across Victoria, Australia. Keywords: Neighbourhood renewal, Social inclusion, Social exclusion, Disadvantage, Neighbourhood intervention, Communityhttps://josi.journals.griffith.edu.au/index.php/inclusion/article/view/164
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Margaret Shield
Melissa Graham
Ann Taket
spellingShingle Margaret Shield
Melissa Graham
Ann Taket
Neighbourhood Renewal: an effective way to address social inclusion
Journal of Social Inclusion
author_facet Margaret Shield
Melissa Graham
Ann Taket
author_sort Margaret Shield
title Neighbourhood Renewal: an effective way to address social inclusion
title_short Neighbourhood Renewal: an effective way to address social inclusion
title_full Neighbourhood Renewal: an effective way to address social inclusion
title_fullStr Neighbourhood Renewal: an effective way to address social inclusion
title_full_unstemmed Neighbourhood Renewal: an effective way to address social inclusion
title_sort neighbourhood renewal: an effective way to address social inclusion
publisher Griffith University
series Journal of Social Inclusion
issn 1836-8808
publishDate 2011-11-01
description Abstract People who live in disadvantaged communities are at increased risk of social exclusion through diminished access and quality of services, lack of opportunity and feeling powerless over decisions relating to their neighbourhoods. Neighbourhood Renewal (NR) is a Victorian State Government initiative that seeks to address this. This paper presents the findings from two individual project sites, side-by-side. Data were collected in 2004/5 and 2009 using face-to-face interviewing with convenience samples of 900 NR residents across the two NR sites at each time period. A comparison group for each NR site consisted of a sample of 150 people living in the same suburb or town but outside the NR site, data were collected by telephone. Data were analysed separately for each NR project site. Findings indicate that neighbourhood renewal strategies can be effective in improving trust in government, perceptions of community participation, influence and control over community decisions and improved services. Community level strategies are valuable in addressing area-level determinants to improve social inclusion. The successes of the NR scheme support the implementation and continuation of area-specific interventions to address disadvantage and social exclusion across Victoria, Australia. Keywords: Neighbourhood renewal, Social inclusion, Social exclusion, Disadvantage, Neighbourhood intervention, Community
url https://josi.journals.griffith.edu.au/index.php/inclusion/article/view/164
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