Interviews with middle class residents in the city: a comparison of Paris and London

DOI

Transcripts of 154 in-depth interviews with middle class residents of inner urban gentrifying (Peckham), inner urban gentrified (Balham), suburban (Berrylands) and exurban (West Horsely and Effingham) neighbourhoods in London. Interviews include discussions of reasons for moving to neighbourhood; previous neighbourhood histories; schooling strategies; attitudes to and involvement in neighbourhood; attitudes to social mix; political and social outlooks. This forms part of a study investigates the contemporary characteristics of the 'new urban' middle classes in France and Britain by comparing Paris and London in terms of the different types of neighbourhoods in which middle-class people have settled, particularly over the last 25 years: gentrified, gentrifying, gated communities, suburban and exurban neighbourhoods. The study investigates to what extent middle-class attitudes and activities vary across these locations and the impact of Paris and London as global cities on these activities. The study finds that neighbourhood location is a strong factor for distinguishing social identity and activities and social norms of different middle-class fractions. Strong gender distinctions persist across the different neighbourhoods that are further distinguished by generational differences in the fortunes and aspirations of the middle classes. The degrees of investment in and identification with neighbourhood varies - within and between London and Paris - as do the responses to social mix, sometimes in unexpected ways. All the neighbourhoods show specific types of what we call 'selective neighbourhood advocacy' by middle-class residents. This neighbourhood-specific selective advocacy challenges the assumptions of nationally-based urban and neighbourhood policy that sees middle-class residents as advocates in socially-mixed neighbourhoods helping to improve services and political responsiveness to these neighbourhoods. The study of middle-class attitudes and activities within these neighbourhoods and the political and social implications of these affiliations and engagements are explored at neighbourhood, city, national and transnational scales. This comparative study investigates the contemporary social and political characteristics and activities of the urban middle classes in Paris and London. It investigates a range of neighbourhood types in each city: inner city gentrified (not socially mixed); gentrifying (socially mixed); suburban; exurban and gated communities. Aim was to ask to what extent the middle classes compare or contrast across these different locations in terms of their social relations and political attitudes and engagements, including, for example, schooling, use of public services and neighbourhood activism. The research consists of depth interviews with middle class residents and elite actors in each neighbourhood as well as an analysis of relevant documents that discuss middle class identity and activity in these cities. The study will to draw out the implications of the findings for urban politics and policies (compared with the role the middle classes are assumed to play in these policies) at the neighbourhood, city, national and transnational scales. This is a fully comparative bilateral project with colleagues in Paris who are equivalently funded by the Agence de Nationale de la Recherche.

The methodological approach for this study was agreed by both French and British research teams and cross-verified and approved at all stages of the research. The French team (ANR funded) were responsible for the Paris fieldwork and the British team (ESRC funded) for London. An initial comparison of possible neighbourhoods using statistical sources to satisfy the neighbourhood typology was supplemented by ‘on the ground’ checks of the neighbourhoods including housing aesthetics, the social characteristics from street and public activity, the retail and commercial infrastructure. Target neighbourhoods (and alternatives) were then cross-verified by the British and French in which both teams visited each of the neighbourhoods in Paris and London. Neighbourhood monographs (comprising neighbourhood statistics, narrative descriptions and photographs) were produced to inform further stages of the research. The core of the research was in-depth interviews with middle-class residents in the five neighbourhood types in each city (up to 35 in each neighbourhood) – with 171 resident interviews completed in the London study. In London recruitment was achieved by hand-delivered letters (supplemented with mailed letters where necessary). No follow-up visits were necessary to obtain the target numbers in each neighbourhood (allowed for in the proposal). The letter was checked and verified a number of times to ensure ethical robustness over consent as well as to the sensitivities involved in asking middle-class professionals to respond to mailings sent to specific streets that, in a limited number of neighbourhoods (mainly gentrifying socially-mixed), comprised different socio-economic groups. Interviews were mostly confirmed by email. The majority of the interviews were conducted by individual RAs who informed each other when they were interviewing as a precautionary measure to enhance interviewer safety. A risk assessment of the fieldwork was conducted as part of the ethical review by the social science Faculty ethics committee at Bristol. A further 23 interviews were conducted with key informants with knowledge of the neighbourhoods in which the same procedures were followed. Interviews were professionally transcribed and entered into NVivo 9

Identifier
DOI https://doi.org/10.5255/UKDA-SN-851501
Metadata Access https://datacatalogue.cessda.eu/oai-pmh/v0/oai?verb=GetRecord&metadataPrefix=oai_ddi25&identifier=39a3c76037f20754dc5be715e835791dd0b82bdb8a12e38d00d91cdda5204fdd
Provenance
Creator Bridge, G, University of Bristol
Publisher UK Data Service
Publication Year 2017
Funding Reference ESRC
Rights Gary Bridge, University of Bristol; The Data Collection is available for download to users registered with the UK Data Service.
OpenAccess true
Representation
Resource Type Text
Discipline Social Sciences
Spatial Coverage Greater London; United Kingdom