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Article

The experience of living in deprived neighbourhoods for LGBT+ people: making home in difficult circumstances

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Citation

Matthews P & Poyner C (2019) The experience of living in deprived neighbourhoods for LGBT+ people: making home in difficult circumstances. Environment and Planning A, 51 (7), pp. 1499-1515. https://doi.org/10.1177/0308518X19852635

Abstract
Research in urban studies on lesbian, gay bisexual and trans (LGBT+) people and their housing choices has focused on economic choices and the role of exclusion, or conversely higher household disposable income, in residential location. Evidence on lived experiences has focused on residence in so-called “gaybourhoods” with high concentrations of non-heterosexual households, or experiences within the home. Contrasting to this scholarship, in this paper we focus on LGBT+ people who live in socially-rented housing in deprived neighbourhoods that are geographically, socially and economically marginal. Our evidence shows how complex experiences of exclusion for LGBT+ people, not always directly connected to their sexual or gender identity led to individuals living in these neighbourhoods. Using the theoretical approach of housing pathways, we further suggest that these neighbourhoods offer limited affordances for wellbeing for LGBT+ individuals that need to be recognised by housing and other service providers. We also argue that mainstream housing and urban studies needs to use sexual and identity as a category of analysis in research so we can better understand the lived experiences of non-heterosexual individuals and households.

Keywords
LGBT+; housing; neighbourhood deprivation; housing pathways; gentrification

Journal
Environment and Planning A: Volume 51, Issue 7

StatusPublished
Funders
Publication date31/10/2019
Publication date online24/05/2019
Date accepted by journal02/05/2019
URL
ISSN0308-518X
eISSN1472-3409

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Professor Peter Matthews

Professor Peter Matthews

Professor, Sociology, Social Policy & Criminology

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