

Author: PALMER CATHERINE ZIERSCH ANNA ARTHURSON KATHY BAUM FRAN
Publisher: Routledge Ltd
ISSN: 1476-7244
Source: Urban Policy and Research, Vol.22, Iss.4, 2004-01, pp. : 411-426
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Abstract
Many poor suburbs in Australia with higher than average numbers of public housing tenants do not simply suffer material disadvantage but also suffer from poor reputations that are reinforced though stigmatising assumptions that portray their residents negatively. Preliminary findings from qualitative research undertaken in Adelaide, South Australia paint a somewhat different picture of some residents in public housing which counters such stereotypes and assumptions and suggests that the picture is not as bleak as the stigmatised accounts suggest. This article examines the ways in which residents in stigmatised suburbs and housing actively resist and challenge the negative image ascribed to them and concludes by considering the public policy implications that come from the research.
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