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Revision as of 10:23, 26 June 2013

Residents' association
IdeologyLocalism
European affiliationNone
European Parliament groupNone
International affiliationNone
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House of Commons
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European Parliament
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London Assembly
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Scottish Parliament
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Welsh Assembly
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Local government
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Residents' associations are organisations formed by groups of people from a specific geographic community who come together to address issues within their local area and act as a voice for their local community. In one form or another they have existed since the mid nineteenth century. In many cases they were founded within newer communities, for example as new settlements were built in British Commonwealth countries, and in the UK many residents' associations were formed by the newcomer-residents of the housing estates that proliferated between the World Wars.

The majority of associations are structured to include a chair, vice-chair, secretary, treasurer and committee members. These positions are decided by way of nominations at an annual meeting when they can be challenged/altered.

Some associations meet to address one specific issue (and quite often some major and controversial local issue is the stimulus to form an association), while others address a wider spectrum of matters. Some residents' associations decide to run candidates for local office to increase their leverage, while others decide to remain as advocacy or action groups independent of any political process. While generally eschewing national party politics, since the reform of UK electoral law in 2000 several British residents' associations have been obliged to register as locality-based political parties to enable them to participate in local elections for borough and county councils.

Membership of a residents' association is normally open to all local people residing in a defined area such as a housing estate, a large residential building, a suburb or an electoral district of local government. They are generally wholly inclusive.

See also

  1. ^ "Local Council Political Compositions". Keith Edkins. 24 June 2013. Retrieved 26 June 2013. {{cite news}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |1= (help)