and unsurprising and successful political opposition from those involved in urban development. The injustice remains but would, in any case, be better met by more systematic taxation of wealth.
The doctrine of the ‘balanced community’ has a long history in town planning in the UK. It is the idea that new (and, if possible, old) housing developments should incorporate a balance of social groups distinguished by social class, ethnicity and age. At the end of the nineteenth century, the emphasis was chiefly on class. Bournville, for example, was explicitly constructed so that working- and middle-class people could live together in close proximity. The same was true of Hampstead Garden Suburb in north London, constructed in the years before the First World War. In this development, the ideal of a mixed community was to be the distinguishing characteristic. In the mind of its founder, a balanced community was to ‘provide a bridge between poverty and privilege and to overcome the ignorance which separated the Two Nations’ (Grafton Green, 1977: 5). The same assumption influenced New Towns policy after the Second World War. The idea was supported by a dislike of segregated housing. For instance, part of the distaste for suburban development that I have described earlier arose from beliefs about the undesirable consequences of an almost entirely middle-class population housed in that location. The same idea informs reactions to working-class housing estates constructed in the interwar period and, more recently, to the housing of immigrant families in Northern towns. The idea of balanced communities was not without its critics in the town planning community in the Long Century. It has also been pointed out very often that, despite its longevity, the policy remains unsupported by any evidence (Gans, 1961; Sarkissian, 1976). Furthermore, its aims seem to vary over time (Cole and Goodchild, 2000).
Nevertheless, it is not the rationality of the balanced community that is at issue here but, rather more, its ideological force, which comes from a belief in the importance of social harmony and a collective life. These two principles are related in their common assumption of an idealized community in the rural village. That assumption is widely invoked in the planning literature. Raymond Unwin, for example, writing in 1909, argued that past societies had manifested ‘the interdependence of different, clearly defined classes’ but ‘these uniting forces have been weakened or lost in modern times’.(1909: 383, 384). ‘In feudal days there existed a definite relationship between the different classes and individuals of society, which expressed itself in the character of the villages and towns in which dwelt those communities of interdependent people.’ What is now required is a restoration of the ‘spirit of association’ so that in ‘the planning of our towns in future there will be an opportunity for the common life and welfare to be considered first’ (1909: 375, 376). Writing thirty years later, Hugh Massingham still adheres to the romanticism of the village community of the Middle Ages. ‘The village community represented a fusion between the social, economic and domestic, and aesthetic life.’ The holders of land lived in an environment of ‘social equality and mutual aid’ (1937: 19). The housing programme of the radical Labour government of 1945 was informed by similar assumptions. As Cole and Goodchild write of Aneurin Bevan, the minister responsible: ‘he wished to build on council estates “the living tapestry of a mixed community” similar to the long-established English and Welsh village … Social balance, he felt, could be provided through a single, inclusive tenure. He thus sought to develop a universal basis for public housing provision, to parallel initiatives in state education, health and social insurance’ (2000: 353).
The idea of social balance thus fuses order-planning with justice-planning. In town planning as a whole, the alliance of order and justice themes did not, of course, remain unchanged over more than a century. Some elements were prominent at some times, only to disappear later. For example, the notion of planning as an aesthetic practice was central at the end of the nineteenth century and up to the Second World War but has given way to a more technical focus as planning has become professionalized and, perhaps, very much less dominated by architects. What remains is the rather watery notion of ‘amenity’. Attempts to tax development value directly preoccupied many writers on planning in the earlier part of the period but are not now so prominent. At the same time, other elements have a remarkable longevity. The ideas of New Towns and the provision of proper housing keep being raised as does the need to protect the countryside.
The 1970s Watershed
The ideology of town planning, precisely because it was composed of two intertwined but apparently somewhat discordant elements, was very forceful in creating a disposition in the Long Century in which regulation of the market became possible in the collective interest. It also helped to form a collection of movements which proved influential, such as the Town and Country Planning Association, the Council for the Preservation of Rural England, the Civic Trust, the Town Planning Institute and, at some remove, the National Trust. These movements proved to be politically effective. In 1962, the Town and Country Planning Association boasted revealingly that: ‘The strategy of the Association has always been to get to influential people. We have not been so interested in an across-the-board approach to the public’ (interview quoted in Foley, 1962).
Nonetheless, as time passed, interventions in the market for land became less radical. ln this change, the 1970s was something of a watershed. Town planning in the UK operates at two levels: the national level of overall planning and general principle and the local level of development control, conservation and building regulation. Within the last fifty years or so, planning has become attenuated at the national level, shorn of more radical ambitions, and has, instead, concentrated on the professionalized, technical activities of local control. In addition, towns and cities are not seen as wholes which can be transformed by the application of a set of principles. Especially from the first Thatcher government in 1979, the collectivist impulses of the town planning system have become very much attenuated. In particular, municipal ownership of housing has been greatly reduced, strategic national and regional planning has been downgraded and the New Towns programme largely abandoned; there has been a relaxation of the rules determining when planning permission is required, attempts have been made to create a presumption in favour of development, and active participation in large development schemes by commercial organizations has been encouraged. At the same time planners themselves started to lose confidence. For example, David Eversley, a planner himself, wrote in 1973 a book which is informed by a sense that the profession is under attack and requires a redefinition of its mission. ‘The planning profession has subjected itself to an incessant process of self-examination’ and the planner ‘is almost universally feared and disliked’ (Eversley, 1973: 3).
The most important change in the 1970s, however, is ideological. The utopian fervour of the early planners faded. The regulations of town planning were still applied but rather more in the spirit of bureaucratic routine. Planners themselves stopped seeing their work as the making of a better world. Beyond the planning profession there was no longer a sympathetic audience that saw a planned society as a worthwhile and achievable goal and wished to be part of a social movement of collective endeavour. The two halves of the earlier ideology of town planning – order and justice – no longer cohered effectively in a social and political environment that had greatly changed.
To a large extent this ideological change was produced by the forceful advocacy of an alternative view of town planning. This was based, like the previous one, on an unlikely alliance between two apparently different positions. From the left, planning practice and theory were attacked from a variety of viewpoints. Those influenced by new currents within Marxism argued that planners were effectively in league with commercial developers who were making extensive profits from large-scale projects (Broadbent, 1977; Kirk, 1980; Simmie, 1981). From a different but related perspective, planners came to be seen as faceless bureaucrats whose schemes destroyed vibrant, self-supporting communities (Jacobs, 1965; Dennis, 1970; Wates, 1976; Fishman, 1980). Fishman (1980: 245) points out the continuity of this viewpoint with the cultural upheaval of the 1960s – ‘the new concern of the 1960s for community and direct democracy and the corresponding mistrust of outside experts and impersonal bureaucracies’. This second viewpoint was closely related to a third with a longer history, that of the importance of the conservation of older buildings and of Nature (MacEwan, 1976; Esher, 1981).
The second position is much simpler and was based in a renascent