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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/11375/12626
Title: Investigating The Effects of Tenure Mix In Toronto's Regent Park Community
Authors: Rowe, Daniel J.
Advisor: Dunn, James R.
Gillett, James
Wilton, Robert
Department: Health and Aging
Keywords: Social Mix;Tenure Mix;Public Housing;Urban Poverty;Policy Design, Analysis, and Evaluation;Social Policy;Urban Studies;Policy Design, Analysis, and Evaluation
Publication Date: Oct-2012
Abstract: <p>Policies of tenure mix have been widely adopted in many industrialized nations and are often justified as a means of attenuating the detrimental effects of concentrated urban poverty. In this thesis, the case of Toronto’s Regent Park community is examined. It is the first large-scale mixed tenure redevelopment of a publicly subsidized housing community in Canada. Using a series of 24 semi-structured qualitative interviews with residents from both tenures, I examine their experience of living in a mixed tenure community and gauge their support for policies of tenure mix more generally. Broader determinants of residential satisfaction in the neighbourhood are also examined. The redeveloped Regent Park is considered to be a relatively safe, convivial, well-serviced, well-situated, and aesthetically pleasing neighbourhood by individuals from both tenures. Further, participants from both tenures expressed support for the ostensible goals of the redevelopment. Resident experiences diverge significantly by tenure with regard to their satisfaction with the management and maintenance of their buildings. Particularly, individuals in the public buildings expressed considerable displeasure with how their buildings were managed and experienced serious physical difficulties that, in some cases, had adverse effects on their health and wellbeing. I find that tenure mix enjoys considerable support from residents of both tenures, with especially strong support evinced by a subset of condominium residents. To assess the efficacy of tenure mix, I employ a conceptual framework provided by Joseph (2006) and find some evidence that the redevelopment has strengthened the social capital of publicly-subsidized tenants. For most residents, more proximal concerns take precedence over the mixed nature of the community.</p>
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/11375/12626
Identifier: opendissertations/7496
8556
3350834
Appears in Collections:Open Access Dissertations and Theses

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