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EDITORIAL: Tapping sources of investment for deprived areas

By Richard Garlick

5 December 2003

In what you may think is a surprising development, hordes of Sunday Telegraph readers have apparently been depositing money in a new bank account that promises to reinvest their savings in charities or enterprises working in deprived areas.

OPINION: Unwrapping a package set to woo the voters

By Sir Peter Hall, professor of planning at the Bartlett School of Planning, University College London. Email: sir.peter.hall@haynet.com

5 December 2003

The Queen's Speech last week will surely be presented as a big bold legislative package - in the last full year of his second term, the intrepid Reverend Blair confronts every vested interest on his own back benches (Regeneration & Renewal, 28 November, p1). As he did over Iraq, he's doing what he thinks is right, and damn the consequences. But viewed more closely, Blair is doing the cleverest thing that a politician can do: walking the moral high ground while quietly pleasing big sections of the electorate.

EDITORIAL: Why a little ASBO success still goes a long way

By Richard Garlick

7 November 2003

Stories about teenage delinquents who laugh in the face of the law have now become such a regular component of national news coverage that it would be easy to dismiss them as examples of tabloid sensationalism.

OPINION: Drastic surgery that puts cities under the knife

By Sir Peter Hall, sir.peter.hall@haynet.com

7 November 2003

The newest thing on the other side of the pond is cosmetic surgery coming-out parties. To avoid the shock of non-recognition on the street - or, in the LA version, in the freeway gridlock - you invite friends to meet the New You. But the idea doesn't stop with people. Evidently, now that architects have got a hold of it, it can be extended effortlessly to cities.

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