All Stories

  1. The reproduction of regional inequality through university access: the Gaokao in China
  2. A world turned upside down: the rise of China and the relative economic decline of the West
  3. Mind the gap: implications of overseas investment for regional house price divergence in Britain
  4. Snakes and ladders: differential patterns of post-reform social mobility in Siping, north-east China
  5. The changing occupational class composition of London
  6. Aspiration, Attainment and Success: An Agent-Based Model of Distance-Based School Allocation
  7. Shrinking the welfare state: the structure, geography and impact of British government benefit cuts
  8. Distance, education and inequality
  9. Praying for success? Faith schools and school choice in East London
  10. Concentration or Diffusion? The Changing Geography of Ethnic Minority Pupils in English Secondary Schools, 1999–2009
  11. ‘Geography matters’: the role distance plays in reproducing educational inequality in East London
  12. Ethnicity, class and aspirationUnderstanding London's new East End
  13. Social reproduction: issues of aspiration and attainment
  14. Introduction: the social transformation of East London
  15. The limits to parental decision making under conditions of constrained choice
  16. Location3Education3: place, choice, constraint in London1
  17. The reshaping of the British welfare system and its implications for geography and geographers
  18. ‘You Take What you are Given’: The Limits to Parental Choice in Education in East London
  19. ‘I am critical. You are mainstream’: a response to Slater
  20. Urban Inequality and Polarization
  21. Moving the Poor Out of Central London? The Implications of the Coalition Government 2010 Cuts to Housing Benefits
  22. The new Mikado? Tom Slater, gentrification and displacement
  23. The Changing Ethnic Structure of Housing Tenures in London, 1991—2001
  24. Spatial Divisions of Welfare: The Geography of Welfare Benefit Expenditure and of Housing Benefit in Britain
  25. Walking Backwards to the Future—Waking Up to Class and Gentrification in London
  26. Deindustrialisation, Gentrification and the Re-invention of the Inner City: London and Melbourne,c.1960–2008
  27. City Centre Gentrification: Loft Conversions in London's City Fringe
  28. Spatially Displaced Demand and the Changing Geography of House Prices in London, 1995–2006
  29. Inward and Upward: Marking Out Social Class Change in London, 1981—2001
  30. Social Background, Ethnicity, School Composition and Educational Attainment in East London
  31. The Geography of Education: Introduction
  32. Loft Conversion and Gentrification in London: From Industrial to Postindustrial Land Use
  33. Flat Break-Ups: The British Condominium Conversion Experience
  34. ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL CHANGE AND INEQUALITY IN GLOBAL CITIES: THE CASE OF LONDON
  35. Gentrification and the Middle-class Remaking of Inner London, 1961-2001
  36. Contemporary human geography: fiddling while Rome burns?
  37. The potential and prospect for global cities in China: in the context of the world system
  38. Shrinking the State
  39. Social Polarisation, Economic Restructuring and Welfare State Regimes
  40. Why Sassen is Wrong: A Response to Burgers
  41. Housing Inheritance and Inequality: A Response to Watt
  42. Les changements socio-économiques à Londres. Croissance des catégories tertiaires qualifiées ou polarisation ?
  43. Gentrification, Class, and Gender: Some Comments on Wardens ‘Gentrification as Consumption’
  44. Social Polarisation in Global Cities: Theory and Evidence
  45. Globalisation, Regulation and the Urban System: Editors' Introduction to the Special Issue
  46. Equity Release Schemes and Equity Extraction by Elderly Households in Britain
  47. The Geography of Housing Wealth and Inheritance in Britain
  48. Gentrifiers or Lemmings? A Response to Neil Smith
  49. A Nation of Inheritors? Housing Inheritance, Wealth and Inequality in Britain
  50. The Blind Men and the Elephant: The Explanation of Gentrification
  51. The Political Geography of Housing in Contemporary Britain
  52. Labour and Housing Market Change in London: A Longitudinal Analysis, 1971-1981
  53. The Politics of Privatization: A Comparative Perspective
  54. The changing socio-economic structure of London and the South East, 1961–1981
  55. The Rise and Fall of London's Purpose-Built Blocks of Privately Rented Flats: 1853–1983
  56. The Rise and Fall of London's Purpose-Built Blocks of Privately Rented Flats: 1853–1983
  57. State Housing Policy Formation and the Changing Role of Housing Associations in Britain
  58. Housing the Two Nations: Socio-Tenurial Polarization in England and Wales, 1961-81
  59. The Changing Tenure Structure of the Greater London Housing Market, 1961–1981
  60. The Changing Tenure Structure of the Greater London Housing Market, 1961–1981
  61. How Far Will London's Population Fall? A Commentary on the 1981 Census
  62. How Far Will London's Population Fall? A Commentary on the 1981 Census
  63. Social Change in London: A Study of Gentrification
  64. Social Change in London: A Study of Gentrification
  65. Social Change and Social Segregation in Inner London, 1961-71
  66. Museums as Flagships of Urban Development
  67. Urban Social Polarization
  68. Social Segregation and Social Polarization
  69. Gentrification, Postindustrialism, and Industrial and Occupational Restructuring in Global Cities
  70. Housing and the UK Economy
  71. Social Geographic Interpretations of Housing Spaces
  72. Sustaining London’s welfare in an age of austerity
  73. The United Kingdom: from pragmatic to systemic privatization
  74. Home-ownership, housing wealth and wealth distribution in Britain