Neighbourly Relations
Making and Remaking Neighbourly Relations
For many residents, the idea of have a neighbourhood with a sense of community is very important. It is often the kinds of things that those interested in selling properties uses as a means of reassuring prospective buyers of the 'great neighbourhood' and the sense of solidarity neighbors can provide although interactions within neighbourhoods is not as clearly defined. Researchers assert that in the process of being neighbours in representing the relational identity of neighbor there is an ongoing process, both physical and ideological, of developing, modifying, and infracting and rebuilding boundaries between what is deemed public and private, and the home and street.
According to scholars, individual relationships with neighbours are contingent upon a number of factors inclusive of cultural background, socioeconomic stratification, age, and length of residency, individual preferences and social characteristics (Taylor, Hunchliffe, Clarke & Bromley, 2009). One of the factors critical to understanding neighbourly relations is understanding social identity. In the text, social identity is defined as 'an identity given by connections to other people and social situations often contrasted with personal identity' (Taylor, et al., 2009, p. 167). The definition goes on to advise, 'some examples are group and collective identities, situated identities, given by the immediate situation so liable to change, and relational identities, usually given by a two-sided, possibly unequal relationship' (Taylor, et al., 2009, p. 167). According to sociologist, Erving Goffman (1959) as cited in Taylor, et al., (2009), individual's daily interactions and behavior suggest to others who they are, what they do or are doing, and what his or her expectations are (p. 172).
One way posited of considering social...
UK Social Trends Quantitative and Qualitative Discussion on Residency Table I provides a basic breakdown of the types of residences in which Britons live and how these are distributed based on region. This denotes that specific selected regions are predisposed toward certain residential options. In a chart which accounts for roughly 22% of all residents in England, the table notes that detached homes are most common in the regions of the East
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