Abstract
The global rhetoric surrounding the role of private markets in the provision of new housing masks a more complex reality, highlighted in processes of spatial planning, in which public policy and private developers are deeply enmeshed. This paper discusses some of the tensions with the help of a detailed examination of plans for housing development on the edge of England's growth region (in Milton Keynes and Northamptonshire) during the period 2003-13. It critically reflects on the consequences of pursuing spatial policies that rely on light touch state involvement in a market shaped by the priorities of powerful corporate actors.
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Cochrane, A., Colenutt, B., & Field, M. (2015). Governing the ungovernable: Spatial policy, markets and volume house-building in a growth region. Policy and Politics, 43(4), 527–544. https://doi.org/10.1332/030557315X14253035075835
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