Housing For A Better Nation

Good housing needs more than good housing policy: housing policy needs to be part of wider social changes towards a more equal, community-centred, environmentally sustainable society, but good housing policy can make an important contribution to those changes. Economic considerations remain key, but we need to transcend the destructive veneration of GDP.

This paper outlines a radically different approach to housing policy. It also looks at immediate improvements that will be steps on the way to more fundamental transformation.

Type of Resource
Policy Paper
Primary Author or Creator
Sarah Glynn
Additional Author(s) / Creators
Common Weal

Public Land Value Capture: A new model for housing development in Scotland

This report outlines the case for public land value capture – the process by which councils, not those selling land, can benefit from the increase in land value due to changing use (such as planning permission for housing) or can reduce house prices by not passing that uplifted cost on to renters and buyers of the houses built on such land. This briefing is based on Common Weal’s submission to the Planning Bill consultation in response to question, on alternative ways to finance infrastructure provision.

Type of Resource
Policy Paper
Primary Author or Creator
Common Weal

Housekeeping Scotland: Discussion paper outlining a new agenda for housing

The United Kingdom’s housing policies have been ideologically-driven, and have led to the current crisis of strangled investment, under-provision and a general flow of power and money from civic society to the wealthy. UK housing has suffered greatly from its politicians’ fixation with a single form of home and tenure, the mortgage-backed and privately-owned home.

Type of Resource
Policy Paper
Primary Author or Creator
Malcolm Fraser
Additional Author(s) / Creators
Common Weal

CARBON-FREE, POVERTY-FREE: HEATING OPTIONS FOR RURAL SCOTLAND

Fuel poverty is not only worse in rural Scotland than in urban Scotland, it also has different characteristics. For example, in urban areas 92% of those classified as income-poor are not classified as fuel-poor while in rural areas only 8% of those classified as income poor are not also fuel poor – fuel poverty plays a much larger role in rural poverty than in urban poverty.

Type of Resource
Policy Paper
Date Published
Primary Author or Creator
Ron Mould, Craig Dalzell, Jonathan Shafi
Additional Author(s) / Creators
Glasgow Caledonian University, Common Weal

Just Warmth: Developing equitable and Sustainable District Heating Systems in Scotland

Scotland heats the majority of its homes and buildings in inefficient and deleterious efforts to become a net zero-carbon nation. Much more effective than individual boilers would be a system of District Heating Systems (DHS). These DHS networks could be supplied with a variety of sources such as biomass, solar thermal or industrial waste heat.

Type of Resource
Policy Paper
Date Published
Primary Author or Creator
Keith Baker, Ron Mould
Additional Author(s) / Creators
Common Weal

Powering our Ambitions: the Role of Scotland's National Energy Company and the Case for a Scottish Energy Evelopment Agency

A call for the Scottish Government to launch a National Energy Company and a Scottish Energy Development Agency.  These bodies would work together to rapidly and strategically decarbonise Scotland’s energy network whilst also supporting community energy projects and developing the new skills and technologies Scotland – and the world – will need to face the challenges of climate change and fuel poverty.

Type of Resource
Policy Paper
Date Published
Primary Author or Creator
Keith Baker, Gordon Morgan, Ron Mould, Iain Wright
Additional Author(s) / Creators
Common Weal

Common Weal's Manifesto for a National Care Service

In this Manifesto, released ahead of the Scottish Government’s Independent Review of Adult Social Care the group lays out the principles of care that should be met by any proposed blueprint for Care reform and will be followed up in due course with a comprehensive blueprint for an NCS that would meet these principles and align with the values of Common Weal.

Type of Resource
Policy Paper
Date Published
Primary Author or Creator
Common Weal Care Reform Group

An Equal Start: A plan for equality in early learning and care in Scotland

his report is a plan for delivering this change through a National Childcare Service in public provision, as a replacement for the fragmented, haphazard and unequal nature of the childcare sector at present. The report provides a comprehensive, costed strategy for achieving this transformation.

Type of Resource
Policy Paper
Primary Author or Creator
Common Weal
Additional Author(s) / Creators
John Davis, Rona MacNicol Lynn McNair, Jamie Mann Melissa O’Neill, Ben Wray

Better Banking – A Public-Good Banking Network For Scotland

The UK has one of the least diverse retail banking systems in Europe with a disproportionately large market share for private banks and very few cooperative, mutual or public options compared to other countries.

In Scotland particularly, bank branches have been closing at a rapid rate leaving much of the country without reliable banking services.

A model which can enable communities to found their own local bank branch providing basic but essential services free of the risky “casino banking” of the private sector is presented.

Type of Resource
Policy Paper
Date Published
Primary Author or Creator
Common Weal

The introduction plan for the new Scottish Currency

The introduction of a new currency needs to account for customer deposits and loans and the Sterling pensions guarantee.

Type of Resource
Policy Paper
Primary Author or Creator
Tim Rideout
Additional Author(s) / Creators
Scottish Reserve Bank