The whole body of tables in the 2011/2012
Review, together with the commentaries (but
not the Contemporary Issues articles which
can only be found in the print edition), are
available here on the website. An interim
update to the tables in this year’s edition
of the Review will be available online iin
the Spring of 2012.
The primary objective of this, the 20th edition
of the UK
Housing Review (initially called
the Housing
Finance Review), remains simply
to draw together key current financial and
related data about both public and private
housing in the United Kingdom, and rapidly
assemble them in a coherent and accessible
format. To that end the Review draws on a wide
range of expenditure plans and departmental
reports, as well as official or other statistical
volumes, survey reports, web portals and publications
based on specific research projects. The Review also includes a number of tables constructed
from databases that are not routinely published
elsewhere.
The structure of the Review, and its sparse
text, aim above all to provide a swift guide
to the data, with more detailed analysis confined
to the Section 1: Contemporary Issues chapters
at the beginning of the Review. This year the
issues chapters focus on migration, private
renting, devolution and the safety net for
homeowners.
The six chapters of Section 2: Commentary
offer a brief introduction to, and discussion
of, the key developments in policy, financial
provision and outputs, that are reflected in
the tables and figures in the main Compendium
of Tables. They also provide a reference to
other publications and data that offer further
useful insights into current policy issues.
Of this year’s six Commentary Chapters,
Hal Pawson wrote 2, 4 and 5, while Steve Wilcox
wrote 1, 3 and 6.
A longer perspective
Many of the tables in the Review provide
data over a long time-period. Wherever possible
those tables start in 1970, providing data
at five-year intervals for the years to 1995,
with annual data for more recent years. The
precise range of the years covered varies from
table to table, depending both on data availability
and the practicality of setting out data on
a single page. Even with its landscape format,
there are limits to the number of years’ data
that the Review can fit onto a single page.
In some form, most of the tables in this
year’s volume have been carried in all
previous editions, and readers can consult
back copies for data for the individual years
between 1981 and 1995 that are no longer published
in the current edition. However, readers should
exercise care as in some cases data for those
earlier years may subsequently have been revised,
primarily as a result of changes in definitions.
A cross-check of the data for those years still
published in the current edition of the Review will generally indicate whether or not this
is an issue.
Regions
The Review contains
several tables providing data for the regions
of England. Many of those tables provide data
for the long-established standard statistical
regions (SSRs). For some time, however, government
statistics have been published primarily on
the basis of government office regions (GORs).
This presents difficulties in providing a consistent
long run of regional data. Wherever possible,
current data for standard regions have been
sought, in order to provide a consistent data
series. This has not, however, always been
possible; equally long back-series of data
for government office regions are not always
available. In some cases, therefore, the Review
includes recent data for GORs, together with
earlier data for SSRs. This is clearly indicated
in the tables concerned. It should also be
noted that the former Merseyside region was
some time ago incorporated within the North
West. There has also been a change in the nomenclature
of government office regions. The Eastern region
is now the East of England, and Yorkshire and
Humberside is Yorkshire and The Humber. The
government office regions are now generally
shown under their current names. However, these
names are not always used in our source documents
or datasets, and we have followed the practice
in the latest editions of our sources, rather
than impose a uniform usage.
Government departments
Over the course of time, government departments
are restructured or simply change their name.
Thus over the years of the Review’s publication
the department responsible for housing policy
in England has evolved from the Department
of the Environment, through the Department
of the Environment, Transport and the Regions,
the Office of the Deputy Prime Minister, to
now being the Department for Communities and
Local Government.
Where data series have been made available
continuously over that period, the reference
given for that data in the tables of the Review
is the current form and name of the responsible
department. Where, however, reference is made
to historical data the reference will be to
the form and name of the responsible department
at the time they were initially published or
otherwise made available to the Review.
Comments and suggestions
Finally, the editors would welcome any comments
or
suggestions on the current and future format
and
contents of the Review, and they can be
contacted by
email, phone or letter.
Professor Steve Wilcox
Centre for Housing Policy
University of York
Heslington
York YO10 5DD
Telephone: 01823 323891
Email: stevewpwilcox@aol.com |
Professor Hal Pawson
Heriot Watt University
Edinburgh
Scotland
EH14 4AS
Email: H.Pawson@hw.ac.uk
(and University of New South Wales -
h.pawson@unsw.edu.au)
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