Acknowledgements Introduction How to use this atlas Chapter 1: Financially bankrupt Introduction 1.1 Bankruptcy, insolvency, individual voluntary arrangements and debt relief orders 1.2 Children living in poverty due to financial deprivation 1.3 Pensioner poverty and inequality due to financial deprivation 1.4 Working-age poverty due to unemployment 1.5 In work poverty due to low or falling earnings 1.6 Public sector cuts: local and national implications 1.7 Where the wealth is: who could afford the cuts? Chapter 2: Residentially bankrupt Introduction 2.
1 Housing price peaks and multi-millionaires' seats 2.2 Housing price change: location, location, location 2.3 When the bank takes back your home: repossessions 2.4 Rents: spreading the pain to those who don't gain 2.5 Out on the street: landlord evictions 2.6 Housing lists: waiting a lifetime for a home 2.7 Homelessness: no roots and few rights? Chapter 3: Politically bankrupt Introduction 3.1 A century of first-past-the-post elections, 1918-2010 3.
2 A century of losers: who came second, 1918-2010 3.3 The 2005 general election: verdict on a war? 3.4 Still fiddling the books? MP's travel expense claims 2008/09 3.5 The 2010 general election result: winners and losers 3.6 The 2010 general election result: legitimacy and turnout 3.7 No overall control: local elections and the future Chapter 4: Morally Bankrupt Introduction 4.1 Child abuse, protection and fear 4.2 Child well-being and bullying 4.
3 Conceptions among girls aged under 16 4.4 Anti-social behaviour: shouting fire 4.5 Criminal behaviour of any kind 4.6 Legalising formerly criminal behaviour: RIPA 4.7 Legalising tax evasion on inheritance Chapter 5: Emotionally bankrupt Introduction 5.1 The 'happiness survey': adult subjective health and well-being 5.2 Children's emotional health 5.3 Children using drugs, alcohol and/or volatile substances 5.
4 Adults popping pills to ward off ills 5.5 Taking medicines for any ills at any age 5.6 Mental health service users 5.7 Foot soldiers of the Big Society Chapter 6: Environmentally Bankrupt Introduction 6.1 Environments that kill the young 6.2 Cars: the greatest environmental threat 6.3 Air quality: how what you breathe varies geographically 6.4 Burning up the planet: CO2 emissions 6.
5 Electricity and gas: changing consumption 6.6 Waste: measuring how much we buy (given how much we throw away) 6.7 Recycling: if you have to use it, then reuse it Conclusion Notes Data sources Appendix.