by Mercy Denedo (Durham University Business School), Amanze Ejiogu (Sheffield Hallam University) and Nic Bliss (Stop Social Housing Stigma Campaign)
Stigma has been a persistent concern raised by social housing tenants. Our previous research - "Stigma and Social Housing in England" and "Stigma in Social Housing in England: Feedback on the Consultation Responses" - identified stigma as a deeply rooted issue within the social housing sector and wider society and emphasised that it must not be overlooked. Both reports called for a collective, concerted effort from stakeholders - including government, politicians, media, housing providers, and tenants - to address stigma and drive the meaningful changes that tenants have long advocated for.
In 2023, we launched a project in partnership with the Stop Social Housing Stigma Campaign (SSHS), the Chartered Institute of Housing (CIH), TPAS, and YD Consultants to provide a framework and resources to enable tenants and landlords to collaboratively work to tackle stigma. As part of this project, we launched three set of surveys in 2024 and gathered responses from 364 social housing tenants, 63 housing professionals, and 9 contractors. Respondents strongly opposed the development of another superficial "tick-box" toolkit and called for tools that would drive genuine cultural change in tenant engagement, experience, and accountability.
Drawing on the survey findings, we developed the initial version of the Tackling Stigma Journey Planner, which informed a series of 13 focus group consultations: eight (8) with tenants, four (4) with housing professionals, and one with contractors. Across the consultations, participants emphasised that addressing social housing stigma should be viewed as a journey, requiring a culture of trust and accountability at its core.
The feedback from the surveys and focus groups shaped a prototype Tackling Stigma Journey Planner, launched at the Housing Community Summit in September 2024. This framework was piloted with 11 Pioneer Traveller landlords - six local authorities (including one Arms-Length Management Organisation) and five housing associations. Lessons and case studies from the pilot are presented in a separate report titled "Tackling Social Housing Stigma Journey Planner - Pioneer Travellers Case Studies and Learning Points"
Building on the pilot phase, survey responses, and consultation feedback, we developed a refined and more comprehensive framework. A summary is included in this report, while the full version is presented in a separate report titled "Challenging Stigma in Social Housing - The Tackling Stigma Journey Planner report"
Complementing this report, the Pioneer Travellers’ case studies and learning points, and the Journey Planner, we produced fifteen short films featuring tenants, housing professionals, and academics speaking candidly about social housing stigma. These films provide personal insights into the construction and experience of stigma and offer practical recommendations for addressing it. They are available on the Durham University and SSHS websites.
We hope that these materials will serve as powerful advocacy tools. We encourage housing providers, trade and professional bodies - including the Chartered Institute of Housing and TPAS - to integrate them into staff training and recruitment programmes, helping to raise awareness, enhance organisational culture, and recruit compassionate, high-performing staff. We also encourage Board Members, Councillors, and senior staff to lead by example and undertake their own tackling stigma journey.
Furthermore, we hope that the Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government, the Regulator of Social Housing, and the Housing Ombudsman will use these resources to influence standards and policies that promote greater accountability, transparency, respectful and inclusive tenant engagement, and the provision of decent, high-quality accommodation across the sector.
Ultimately, our ambition is to inform policymaking, shift media narratives, and challenge public perceptions of social housing estates and their residents.
This report examines the findings from the consultations (through survey and focus groups); and provided additional recommendations to support tenants, housing providers, policymakers and others in tackling stigma in social housing.
a. Recommendations from the survey and focus groups with contractors
In responding to the survey and in the focus groups, contractors and other stakeholders made several suggestions on what they thought would be effective in challenging stigma. These are summarised below:
b. Recommendations from the survey and focus groups with housing professionals
Through the survey and focus groups, housing professionals made a number of suggestions in terms of what they think has been effective and what needs to be done to challenge stigma. These include:
c. Recommendations from the survey and focus groups with tenants
Suggestions for what could be done to challenge stigma were made through the survey and focus groups and are summarised below:
In issuing the direction on Competence and Conduct to the Regulator of Social Housing (RSH), ensure:
c. Recommendation for Regulator of Social Housing (RSH)
In your review of the Transparency, Influence and Accountability Regulatory Standard, or a result of any new Competence and Conduct Standard directive from Government:
ii. Code of Practice, which accompanies the Consumer Standards:
d. Recommendation to the Housing Ombudsman Service