2002
DOI: 10.1080/0042098022000011380
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Urban Regeneration, Social Inclusion and Large Store Development: The Seacroft Development in Context

Abstract: Of central importance to the policy debate which emerged during the late 1990s in the UK on the topic of 'food deserts' were the causes of the perceived worsening access to food retail provision in certain poor neighbourhoods of British cities. The 1980s/early 1990s era of intense food superstore development on edge-of-city sites was seen as having unevenly stripped food retailing out of parts of those cities, or having repositioned that provision downwards in range and quality terms. By the late 1990s, howeve… Show more

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Cited by 103 publications
(87 citation statements)
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“…In response, it recommended`p olicies which will increase the availability and accessibility of foodstuffs to supply an adequate and affordable diet ... [and] which will ensure adequate retail provision of food to those who are disadvantaged'' (Acheson, 1998, pages 65^66). The issue rapidly became what should those policies most appropriately be, and what was the role of retail planning policy in tackling these issues (Wrigley et al, 2002a). The consultation report of PAT 13 (DoH, 1999b) strongly favoured local small-scaleretailer-oriented solutions based upon explicit involvement of the local community and its key stakeholdersöthe development of what it termed`local retail strategies'.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…In response, it recommended`p olicies which will increase the availability and accessibility of foodstuffs to supply an adequate and affordable diet ... [and] which will ensure adequate retail provision of food to those who are disadvantaged'' (Acheson, 1998, pages 65^66). The issue rapidly became what should those policies most appropriately be, and what was the role of retail planning policy in tackling these issues (Wrigley et al, 2002a). The consultation report of PAT 13 (DoH, 1999b) strongly favoured local small-scaleretailer-oriented solutions based upon explicit involvement of the local community and its key stakeholdersöthe development of what it termed`local retail strategies'.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This will involve defining the food shopping needs of local people within a retail strategy and identifying`food deserts'öareas that lack retail services within say a 500-metre radius' ' (Beverley Hughes, in DETR, 2000a). The major retailers, however, for sound commercial reasons öwhat they freely described as`enlightened self-interest' (Martin Venning, Tesco plc quoted in Brauner, 2001, page 21)öbegan aggressively to adopt a large-store-centred urban regeneration agenda focused, in particular, around redevelopment of former industrial`brown field' sites and the increasingly derelict 1960s/70s district shopping centres serving local authority housing estates (Wrigley et al, 2002a). These urban regeneration schemes (for examples, see Carley et al, 2001) were typically based around partnerships involving local authorities, employment and enterprise agencies, and community organizations.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…In such localities, consumers are highly dependent on convenience stores as they often provide the only remaining access to grocery stores, with the consequence that consumers in these areas tend to pay higher prices and have a more restricted diet (Whelan et al 2002). At the other extreme, a handful of major studies have explored the effect of provision interventions from the opening of major multiple-owned superstores in food deserts in Leeds (Wrigley et al 2002a;Wrigley et al 2003;Wrigley et al 2002b) and Glasgow (Cummins et al 2008), attempting to assess the effects on diet. These findings provide contrary evidence that such large-scale initiatives have a positive effect on the dietary patterns of local households.…”
Section: Enhancing Consumer Choice and Accessmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Acheson, 1998, Department of Health, 1999a, 1999b, 2004, Wanless, 2004, though this relationship was unproven. Excellent summaries of this background are presented in Wrigley (2002) and Wrigley et al et al (2002a).…”
Section: A) Retail-led Regeneration and Food Desertsmentioning
confidence: 99%