2020
DOI: 10.1177/0038038520975593
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Social Polarisation at the Local Level: A Four-Town Comparative Study on the Challenges of Politicising Inequality in Britain

Abstract: This article examines how intensifying inequality in the UK plays out at a local level, in order to bring out the varied ways polarisation takes place ‘on the ground’. It brings a community analysis buttressed by quantitative framing to the study of economic, spatial and relational polarisation in four towns in the UK. We distinguish differing dynamics of ‘elite-based’ polarisation (in Oxford and Tunbridge Wells) and ‘poverty-based’ polarisation (in Margate and Oldham). Yet there are also common features. Acro… Show more

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Cited by 15 publications
(5 citation statements)
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“…Similarly, neoliberalising tendencies have in effect, in many places, shifted the terms of the state–citizen relation to one of provider–consumer (Anand, 2012) or facilitator–entrepreneur (Vicol, 2020). This ‘squeezed middle’ is then often described as the driving force of resurgent populism and nationalism, across the global North (Kalb, 2019; Koch et al, 2021) and increasingly also in the global South (for example in India and Brazil). Moreover, there is often a racial dimension to this aspect of class stratification, based on selective inclusion and exclusion, which remains underplayed or unacknowledged in official state policy, as in these cited examples (see also Bhambra, 2017; Krishna, 2015), and that presents a more complicated picture in some of the cases in this special issue, like in Bolivia, Mozambique and South Africa (Bolt, 2022; Schubert, 2022; Sheild Johansson, 2022 – all in this issue).…”
Section: The Deserving Middle Classes and The Deserving Statementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Similarly, neoliberalising tendencies have in effect, in many places, shifted the terms of the state–citizen relation to one of provider–consumer (Anand, 2012) or facilitator–entrepreneur (Vicol, 2020). This ‘squeezed middle’ is then often described as the driving force of resurgent populism and nationalism, across the global North (Kalb, 2019; Koch et al, 2021) and increasingly also in the global South (for example in India and Brazil). Moreover, there is often a racial dimension to this aspect of class stratification, based on selective inclusion and exclusion, which remains underplayed or unacknowledged in official state policy, as in these cited examples (see also Bhambra, 2017; Krishna, 2015), and that presents a more complicated picture in some of the cases in this special issue, like in Bolivia, Mozambique and South Africa (Bolt, 2022; Schubert, 2022; Sheild Johansson, 2022 – all in this issue).…”
Section: The Deserving Middle Classes and The Deserving Statementioning
confidence: 99%
“…A widespread perception of the significant increase in inequality in the UK has been presented in recent years [1]. In the 1970s, the UK was one of the least unequal countries in the world due to its minimal income and wealth disparities.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The case of Trump's elections shows not only that the way discourse is shaped and reproduced affects our thinking, but also how discourse can be used (both deliberately and involuntarily) to deepen polarisation and radicalization within society. As many scholars have pointed out, we live in the age of major polarisation, especially in the wide sphere of politics (see Şen 2019;Koch et al 2020). Polarisation is rightfully pictured as something we should be afraid of as it divides people, bringing us back to the dialectic of fear.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%