Feature image: Panel discussion at the research launch on Friday 18 October
This Black History Month new research on the opportunities and challenges for black and ethnically diverse community led housing has been released.
The research was carried out by two community led housing practitioners (Henri Baptiste and Claude Hendrickson MBE) and researchers at the University of Liverpool (Tom Moore) and Sheffield Hallam University (Yael Arbell) , and was co-funded by ourselves at the Community Land Trust Network and many others including the Nationwide Foundation, Power to Change and the Tudor Trust.
Key findings:
- Community led housing is identified as a way for communities experiencing racial inequality to influence planning and development processes
- There is a perception that awareness of community led housing with communities experiencing racial inequality is low, which has also led to under-representation in leadership roles
- The need for improved data to provide a quantitative understanding of representation
- The potential for proactive engagement and more inclusive decision-making to ensure funding and delivery models are shaped by lived experience
- The potential and benefits of greater peer-to-peer support
- The need for long-term funding for the sector
Learning from this research
Our vision is that every community in England and Wales can play an active role in making itself more socially, economically and environmentally sustainable through community ownership of land and affordable housing. This vision relies on representation and this new research sets out crucial steps that will be necessary as the sector seeks to achieve that vision.
The report highlights recommendations for a range of audiences – infrastructure bodies, funders, central government, and local and combined authorities. As the membership body for community land trusts in England and Wales, staff and trustees will discuss and digest how the research shapes our future plans.
Plans already in place:
- Developing more case studies and sharing stories of community led housing success, ensuring a diversity of voice and experience
- Creating protected spaces for communities experiencing racial inequality for peer learning and capacity building
- Exploring opportunities to partner with funders, community led housing hubs and enablers, and other community-based organisations – particularly those with a racial justice focus – to raise awareness of community led housing, grow the number of CLT projects led by people of the global ethnic majority and improve representation within the sector.
The Community Land Trust Network recognises the importance of this research and is grateful to the research team, with special thanks to Claude and Henri, for carrying out this work. Sincere thanks also to the interviewees for sharing their experiences – often difficult – that they have faced.
The sector is collectively trying to change a system that denies agency and voice to citizens full stop. While the research champions community led housing and its potential to address racial inequalities within the housing system and empower communities experiencing racial inequality, there’s still a long way to go.
Society will benefit when the community land trust approach becomes a tool for all individuals and communities to build power.