Discover Resources by Tags: town centre
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Number of items: 2.
                How has the evolving role of women contributed to driving change in UK Town Centres
        
      
Shared with the World by Elangkathir Duhindan
    Abstract     Is the importance of women on the High Street being  overlooked?  Debate around the current  state of town centres has been intense.   The demise of household names such as Woolworths and BHS has led to deep  concern as to whether it is reconfiguring, or imploding. There is a lot at  stake as town centres generate great social and economic value.      A range of stakeholders are working to identify the drivers  behind the instability in order to subvert the decline.   Online shopping is highlighted as the  greatest threat in an array of others, including taxation, high retail rents,  inflexible leases, fragmented ownership, out-of-town centres, and poor infrastructure  and built environments.  Policy  discussion and development target these areas.   Little attention is paid to the most important factor, the  consumer.  Women undertake or influence  up to 80% of purchases, they are the main consumer.  If footfall is down in town centres, this  must be due to changes in their shopping habits.      Focusing on women in the London Boroughs of Lewisham and  Bromley, the aim was to test whether the evolving role of women is the  foundation for changing shopping habits and, ultimately, town centre woes.  Looking through the prism of feminist  geography, the home, work, leisure and shopping spaces that women inhabit, and  mobility between these, were analysed.   It was found that women’s roles and attitudes across all age ranges are  changing and their shopping behaviour reflects this, with wide ranging policy  implications.
      Shared with the World by Elangkathir Duhindan
                TESTING THE JACOBS CONDITIONS FOR
URBAN VITALITY: THE CASE OF UK TOWN
AND CITY CENTRES AND THE
CORONAVIRUS PANDEMIC
        
      
Shared with the World by Elangkathir Duhindan
    In The Death and Life of Great American
Cities, Jane Jacobs proposed four
conditions for generating and maintaining
vibrant urban diversity (mixed uses, short
blocks, aged buildings, and sufficient
density), but subsequent empirical work to
test them has been limited. This study
responds by studying town and city centres
in Great Britain in the wake of coronavirusinduced
restrictions to answer the
question: can Jane Jacobs’ four rules for
generating urban diversity help explain
why some High Streets in Britain have
demonstrated more resilience than others?
      Shared with the World by Elangkathir Duhindan
 
	  
