More evidence needed around Place

London Sport

A new report from Place & Evidence emphasises the need for better evidence to understand how to improve places in the UK, noting that progress is challenging due to a centralised government, reduced local funding, and difficulties in long-term collaboration.

It identifies five categories of place-based change:

  1. Continuous local social change
  2. Civil society-led change
  3. State and civil society relations
  4. Market interventions
  5. Rebalancing civil society, state and market

The report explains in detail how evidence is collected to assess impact. Community-led work is mainly in categories 1–3, state-led in 3–5, and philanthropic-led in 5.

Place-based change is defined as people working together in a specific area to improve life for everyone there, a process that can take many years.

Projects that do not focus on a place, benefit local people, use local relationships, or allow time for change are not considered truly place-based, and the report recommends learning from each type of work and international examples, especially in categories 4 and 5.

Geographic Coverage
United Kingdom
Summarised by
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