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Towards an ecology of retail financial services: Understanding the persistence of door-to-door credit and insurance providers

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Towards an ecology of retail financial services: Understanding the persistence of door-to-door credit and insurance providers. / Leyshon, Andrew; Burton, Dawn; Knights, David et al.
In: Environment and Planning A, Vol. 36, No. 4, 30.04.2004, p. 625-645.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Leyshon, A, Burton, D, Knights, D, Alferoff, C & Signoretta, P 2004, 'Towards an ecology of retail financial services: Understanding the persistence of door-to-door credit and insurance providers', Environment and Planning A, vol. 36, no. 4, pp. 625-645. https://doi.org/10.1068/a3677

APA

Vancouver

Leyshon A, Burton D, Knights D, Alferoff C, Signoretta P. Towards an ecology of retail financial services: Understanding the persistence of door-to-door credit and insurance providers. Environment and Planning A. 2004 Apr 30;36(4):625-645. doi: 10.1068/a3677

Author

Leyshon, Andrew ; Burton, Dawn ; Knights, David et al. / Towards an ecology of retail financial services : Understanding the persistence of door-to-door credit and insurance providers. In: Environment and Planning A. 2004 ; Vol. 36, No. 4. pp. 625-645.

Bibtex

@article{4ae558e6ff384b208855a2138e49ff44,
title = "Towards an ecology of retail financial services: Understanding the persistence of door-to-door credit and insurance providers",
abstract = "In this paper we explore the relationship between knowledge, trust, and space in the production and consumption of retail financial services as part of a wider enquiry into processes of financial exclusion. We argue that the relationship between knowledge and trust helps to explain the evolution of financial services and the production over time of distinctive ecologies of financial service production and use. We discuss the changing scales of financial knowledge and trust in relation to the evolution of the UK financial services industry. We identify two idealised ecologies and networks of retail financial services. The middle-class suburb represents an ecology and network of privilege within the contemporary retail financial services market. It displays relatively high levels of aggregate knowledge about the financial system and constitutes an important part of the retail financial services network, with strong and frequent connections to the financial services industry as a whole. Poor inner-city areas and peripheral local authority housing estates, meanwhile, have very different financial ecologies. Areas of relative deprivation and poverty, they constitute 'relic' financial ecologies that have been bypassed and mostly ignored by the mainstream financial services industry. They are colonised by a distinctive set of financial institutions that include firms that operate door-to-door. We look at the formation and evolution of these ecologies over time and discuss the potential of enriching the ecology of the poor inner-city and peripheral local authority housing estate through public policy.",
author = "Andrew Leyshon and Dawn Burton and David Knights and Catrina Alferoff and Paola Signoretta",
year = "2004",
month = apr,
day = "30",
doi = "10.1068/a3677",
language = "English",
volume = "36",
pages = "625--645",
journal = "Environment and Planning A",
issn = "0308-518X",
publisher = "SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC",
number = "4",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Towards an ecology of retail financial services

T2 - Understanding the persistence of door-to-door credit and insurance providers

AU - Leyshon, Andrew

AU - Burton, Dawn

AU - Knights, David

AU - Alferoff, Catrina

AU - Signoretta, Paola

PY - 2004/4/30

Y1 - 2004/4/30

N2 - In this paper we explore the relationship between knowledge, trust, and space in the production and consumption of retail financial services as part of a wider enquiry into processes of financial exclusion. We argue that the relationship between knowledge and trust helps to explain the evolution of financial services and the production over time of distinctive ecologies of financial service production and use. We discuss the changing scales of financial knowledge and trust in relation to the evolution of the UK financial services industry. We identify two idealised ecologies and networks of retail financial services. The middle-class suburb represents an ecology and network of privilege within the contemporary retail financial services market. It displays relatively high levels of aggregate knowledge about the financial system and constitutes an important part of the retail financial services network, with strong and frequent connections to the financial services industry as a whole. Poor inner-city areas and peripheral local authority housing estates, meanwhile, have very different financial ecologies. Areas of relative deprivation and poverty, they constitute 'relic' financial ecologies that have been bypassed and mostly ignored by the mainstream financial services industry. They are colonised by a distinctive set of financial institutions that include firms that operate door-to-door. We look at the formation and evolution of these ecologies over time and discuss the potential of enriching the ecology of the poor inner-city and peripheral local authority housing estate through public policy.

AB - In this paper we explore the relationship between knowledge, trust, and space in the production and consumption of retail financial services as part of a wider enquiry into processes of financial exclusion. We argue that the relationship between knowledge and trust helps to explain the evolution of financial services and the production over time of distinctive ecologies of financial service production and use. We discuss the changing scales of financial knowledge and trust in relation to the evolution of the UK financial services industry. We identify two idealised ecologies and networks of retail financial services. The middle-class suburb represents an ecology and network of privilege within the contemporary retail financial services market. It displays relatively high levels of aggregate knowledge about the financial system and constitutes an important part of the retail financial services network, with strong and frequent connections to the financial services industry as a whole. Poor inner-city areas and peripheral local authority housing estates, meanwhile, have very different financial ecologies. Areas of relative deprivation and poverty, they constitute 'relic' financial ecologies that have been bypassed and mostly ignored by the mainstream financial services industry. They are colonised by a distinctive set of financial institutions that include firms that operate door-to-door. We look at the formation and evolution of these ecologies over time and discuss the potential of enriching the ecology of the poor inner-city and peripheral local authority housing estate through public policy.

U2 - 10.1068/a3677

DO - 10.1068/a3677

M3 - Journal article

AN - SCOPUS:1842681771

VL - 36

SP - 625

EP - 645

JO - Environment and Planning A

JF - Environment and Planning A

SN - 0308-518X

IS - 4

ER -