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Poverty and
'place': does locality make a difference?
It’s easy
to view poverty as an all-encompassing and uniform experience. However,
the reality of poverty varies from place to place. Carol-Ann
Hooper, Sarah Gorin, Christie Cabral and Claire Dyson
present new research that highlights the impact that community context
has upon families living in poverty.
Introduction
Sample
and methodology
The
different community contexts
Concluding
comments
References
Introduction
The impact of poverty on child well-being is well established. Both
parenting and community context are thought to play some part in
this relationship, although exactly what part is debated – the relationship
between communities, families and children is clearly complex.[Footnote
1] Most studies of parenting in poverty
have focused on families living in deprived neighbourhoods.[Footnote
2] There is some evidence that the disadvantages
associated with such neigh-bourhoods are associated with increased
stress,[Footnote 3] and
much policy effort has recently been focused on these areas (e.g.
through area-based initiatives). However, locality
is only one factor influencing poverty and social exclusion (so
many families in poverty are missed by such approaches), and it
is clear inequality has an independent effect on well-being.[Footnote
4] Poor families living in relatively affluent areas
with greater local inequality might be expected to face a different
set of issues, which have been relatively unexplored so far.
This
article discusses findings from a qualitative study of low-income
families, which aimed to explore the relationships between poverty,
parenting and children’s well-being in diverse social circumstances
by including families living both in deprived and in relatively
affluent areas. Our data suggests, as did a previous qualitative
study,[Footnote 5] that
each kind of community context may disadvantage families in poverty
in substantially different ways, although there were also many similarities.
Sample
and methodology
The research project was based in two locations – London and York.
Families in London were recruited from local authorities that were
amongst the 10 per cent most deprived in the country by Indices
of Multiple Deprivation (IMD) rankings. Families in Yorkshire were
recruited from the 40 per cent least deprived. In each location
families were recruited via Children’s Services, voluntary
organisations and schools, to include families with a range of experiences
of services. In total, 70 families participated, 32 living in the
areas of high deprivation and 38 in the more affluent areas. Where
possible, we interviewed both parents (where there were two in the
household) and one child (the oldest within the age range 5–11).
A total of 82 adults (including 15 men) and 59 children were interviewed.
In the deprived areas, the sample was ethnically diverse (with Bangladeshi
the most common ethnicity, followed by white British); in the affluent
areas, the sample was almost entirely white British. Nearly half
the adults interviewed in the deprived areas were first-generation
immigrants.
In-depth interviews
with parents explored their current situation in relation to money,
housing, parenting and support, past life experiences including
their own childhoods, and their experience of services, as well
as gathering information on children’s well-being. Interviews with
children, which were shorter and more playful, covered their views
about money, family and friendships, how they spent their time,
their subjective well-being and their understanding of stress within
the family. Focus groups were also held with professionals – health
visitors, teachers and social workers – in each location, to explore
their perspectives on the relationship between low-income families
and services in that area. Full details of the methodology
and sample are given in the report.[Footnote
6]
The
different community contexts
The deprived local authorities in London were characterised by below-average
household income, high levels of unemployment and an ethnically
diverse population. The less deprived local authorities in Yorkshire
had far fewer low-income families, and were predominantly white
and relatively affluent overall – most of the participating families
lived in small towns or cities with a few living in villages. Community
context was only one of the sources of diversity in the sample –
gender, ethnicity, class, religion and individual biography also
interacted in many and complex ways to influence identities, experiences
and opportunities. Poverty was also only one of the sources of adversity
in their lives, accompanied for many by domestic violence, child
maltreatment, mental health problems, relationship breakdown, children’s
behavioural problems and more.
Housing
The majority of families we interviewed in both locations (similar
proportions in each) were renting from the council or a housing
association. Poor housing conditions and overcrowding occurred in
both contexts. These could impact on children’s health (e.g. damp
and draughts contributing to respiratory conditions), and general
well-being – for example, overcrowding intensified conflict between
siblings and inhibited opportunities for play and sleep, with lack
of sleep in turn undermining ability to concentrate in school. Housing
conditions were significantly worse in the deprived areas, where
local authorities were generally unresponsive in tackling problems.
Parents in both locations talked of long waits for repairs, despite
problems being reported repeatedly to the council, and even longer
waits for rehousing. In the deprived contexts, however, there was
a widespread sense of powerlessness to influence their home circumstances
among parents, and even professionals were made helpless by their
encounters with Housing Departments. As one health visitor put it:
‘It gets to the point where you just think “what’s the point?”’
Poor housing
conditions and overcrowding were less extreme in the affluent contexts,
but there were some different problems such as a lack of affordable
housing and the expense of heating a large house. Although housing
authorities here were similarly unresponsive over repairs and rehousing.,
families mostly had more personal or financial resources to manage
this, either by standing up to the council or by finding a way to
pay for repairs themselves. Many were nevertheless angry at what
they felt was degrading and disrespectful treatment by housing authorities.
Neighbourhood
context
There were greater fears about crime (including gun crime), drugs,
racism and unsafe neigh-bourhoods in the deprived areas. Many parents
were anxious about their children being influenced by or drawn into
drugs or anti-social behaviour. Some kept their children inside
- despite lack of space - to avoid them getting into trouble. For
some, particularly lone parents, the desire to supervise and safeguard
their children in these contexts conflicted with the need to work.
Some women also avoided going out themselves for fear of being attacked.
Families in
affluent contexts usually had safer environments for themselves
and their children, although some lived on estates with a relatively
poor reputation. They generally had safer space for children to
play outside, although the children sometimes had fewer others to
play with, whether because of being on different income levels from
neighbours, lack of children of a similar age in the neighbourhood
or living at a distance from children’s school friends. Although
relatively little crime was seen as a benefit of the neighbourhood
in affluent areas, there were often specific threats identified
(e.g. a known ‘paedophile’, a violent ex-partner, a particular group
of lads or ‘bad family’) and some similar fears and strategies in
relation to children.
Several families
in the deprived areas talked of a lack of cultural integration.
This tended to be viewed positively by insiders to the group concerned
(giving a sense of belonging) and negatively by outsiders (contributing
to isolation). Cultural diversity was not mentioned by parents in
the affluent areas, but was also an issue there, though with fewer
and different minority communities present (largely Kosovan refugees
and East European migrants). Professionals had considerably more
experience of thinking about culturally specific needs, constraints
and patterns in the deprived areas.
Poverty,
inequality and social exclusion
In both contexts, parents were aware of the pressures on children
to keep up with their friends by having the latest toys and the
‘right’ clothes and trainers, but parents in the affluent contexts
had higher standards for their children to live up to. They worried
about their children being unable to have, for example, similar
kinds of (expensive) birthday parties, leisure activities (e.g.
horse-riding) and foreign holidays.
Children as
young as five years old had a fairly accurate perception of their
families’ relative poverty within their local context. When shown
five money bags of increasing size and asked to indicate where they
would place their family’s income level and then that of their friends’
families, children in affluent areas consistently chose a smaller
(often the smallest) money bag for their own family and a larger
money bag for their friends’ families, typically two money bags
larger. Children in deprived areas picked all sizes of money bags
for their own families’ income and were just as likely to choose
smaller as larger money bags for their friends’ families. Children’s
friendships were very important to them and those with strong friendships
with children from better-off families said the inequality did not
affect their friendships or what they did together. They sometimes
reported friends sharing resources (e.g. money to spend on a shopping
trip, toys children would not otherwise get to try) and friends’
families including them in outings they would not normally get to
do with their own families. However, children in the affluent areas
also reported significantly more bullying than those in the deprived
contexts. This was not a representative sample, but being a small
and visibly different minority may make children more vulnerable
to bullying in affluent contexts. Several children in affluent areas
described being told they were dirty or had nasty habits because
they came from a poor family or that they would always be poor because
their parents were poor. At the same time, weapons and violent assaults
in schools (not necessarily against the children interviewed) were
mentioned more frequently by children
from deprived areas, and a more violent local culture (often influenced
by gangs) may mean children who are bullied in such contexts are
at greater risk of injury.
Access to
amenities and services
Families in the deprived areas tended to have better access to affordable
(or free) amenities and facilities for children, to live close to
schools, shops, mosques, churches and community centres, and to
have better transport links than did families in more affluent contexts.
However, even relatively low costs, combined with the effort involved,
could inhibit use of facilities, as could the condition of those
facilities or their other users. In the affluent areas, affordable
activities for children, cheap shops and many services were at a
greater distance and less easily accessed (without a car), and there
was simply less available tailored to the needs of low-income families.
Services such as counselling and childcare were provided primarily
by the private sector. Some were lucky enough to have a nice park
or playground nearby, and such free facilities were generally in
good condition and relatively safe, but the awareness of many facilities
out of reach (for whatever reason, cost, time and/or transport),
was a significant source of frustration and stress.
The professionals
we interviewed also commented that low-income families were often
reluctant to use what facilities there were (e.g. mother and toddler
groups or swimming pools) in affluent areas, feeling they would
stick out as noticeably different in predominantly middle-class
environments. Children in deprived areas were much more likely to
go swimming or to regular sports sessions than children in affluent
areas, partly because free or cheap facilities were more available
and partly because the lack of safe places to play outside meant
some parents made extra efforts to make this possible. More children
also attended after-school clubs in deprived areas.
Schools
Parents in both deprived and affluent areas had had mixed experiences
with schools. Where teachers had time for them, took an interest
in their children and were friendly and approachable, they were
by and large happy with their schools, especially (but not only)
if their children were also doing well. Where communication was
poor, classes or schools were too big and busy, or parents felt
looked down on or their circumstances not recognised, they were
less happy. The experience of feeling disrespected was sometimes
related to low income, primarily in the affluent areas where poverty
was a less familiar issue to schools. One parent described feeling
humiliated by having to reply saying he couldn’t afford it every
time the school’s standard letter asking for a contribution to trips
came round, despite having explained his situation to the school.
Teachers in
both areas were conscious of the disadvantages children from low-income
families brought with them to school. There were many positive initiatives
developing, like nurture groups run by speech therapists for children
starting school with poorly developed language skills (mostly from
low-income families and attributed to lack of stimulation and interaction
at home) in the affluent areas and homework clubs for children whose
parents lacked the confidence or capacity to help them with their
homework to get help elsewhere in the deprived areas. Professionals
in affluent areas observed that children from low-income families
were more likely to stand out as different at school in such a context
and often had an internalised sense of difference too, and could
have a hard time as a result. Low-income families could easily become
perceived as a problem or the source of other problems in schools
where they formed a very small minority, and where schools and other
parents were less familiar with their situations.
Although the
parents we interviewed placed a high value on communication with
schools, teachers talked of the difficulties of involving parents.
This was especially so in the affluent areas where teachers reported
that it was ‘impossible’ to get parents from poorer areas in parent-teacher
associations (PTAs) and often difficult to get them to come to parents’
evenings. Lack of involvement was thought to be the result of such
parents’ feeling intimidated, both by the school and by middle-class
parents, lacking confidence in such environments, and/or lacking
motivation or aspiration for their children. While these may all
be relevant, more imaginative thinking about how to engage parents
might prevent judging poor parents against standard, middle-class
lifestyles. Teachers in the deprived areas emphasised the need to
be informal, accessible and sensitive to culturally diverse lifestyles.
A dedicated facilitator to develop initiatives such as coffee mornings
and make personal contact with parents, learning mentors for children
who could also engage parents on a one-to-one basis, and careful
timing of meetings (e.g. first thing in the morning – ‘we don’t
let them leave the gates!’) were recommended.
Concluding
comments
The differences between community contexts should not be overstated.
Even in areas of high deprivation, inequality is often highly visible,
both in schools and the wider environment, and there is considerable
variation within and between both deprived and affluent areas. However,
the situation of low-income families in affluent contexts merits
more attention. While in some contexts lower demand on services
may mean needs are better met, in others families may be disadvantaged
by lack of accessible services or feel more ‘under the microscope’.
Professionals wishing to develop services tailored to low-income
families in the affluent contexts had often been frustrated by lack
of funding, political will or community support. At the same time,
professionals working in highly deprived areas talked of the risk
of over-familiarity with poverty, of becoming immune and not noticing
it any more, and may sometimes fail to give due recognition to the
challenges it poses as a result. What is clear is that attention
to child poverty and its impacts are needed in all areas, not only
those known for high levels of deprivation, and that the challenges
poverty presents for parents are by no means uniform. The needs
associated with diverse contexts merit more recognition in national
policy. Housing needs should also be routinely incorporated into
local planning for children.
This article
is based on a research project developed by the Frank Buttle Trust,
the NSPCC and the University of York. The project was funded by
the Big Lottery Fund.
Carol-Ann
Hooper is Senior Lecturer in Social Policy at the University
of York; Sarah Gorin and Claire Dyson are Researchers
at NSPCC; Christie Cabral is a Researcher now based at ALSPAC,
University of Bristol.
References
1. J Barnes and others, Children and Families in Communities:
theory, research, policy and practice, John Wiley & Sons, Chichester,
2006 [back to text]
2. D Ghate & N Hazel, Parenting in poor Environments: stress,
support and coping, Jessica Kingsley Publishers, London, 2002;
P Seaman and others, Parenting and children’s resilience in disadvantaged
communities, National Children’s Bureau, Joseph Rowntree Foundation,
London, 2005 [back to text]
3. S Fitzpatrick, Poverty of Place, Working Paper, Centre
for Housing Policy, University of York, 2004; R Atkinson & K Kintrea,
‘Disentangling area effects: evidence from deprived and non-deprived
neighbourhoods’ in Urban Studies, 38, 12, pp. 2277–2298,
2001; Ghate & Hazel 2002 [back to text]
4. R Wilkinson, The Impact of Inequality, New Press, New
York, 2005 [back to text]
5. R Atkinson & K Kintrea, ‘”Opportunities and despair, it’s all
in there”: practitioner experiences and explanations of area effects
and life chances’ in Sociology, 38 (3), 2004, pp. 437–55
[back to text]
6. C-A Hooper and others, Living with hardship 24/7: the diverse
experiences of families in poverty in England, The Frank Buttle
Trust, 2007 [back to text]
Poverty
128, Autumn 2007 |