Independent probes urged for erring RSL's
Series: Housing Today ; (283) 9 May 2002, 6(1)Publication details: 2002Subject(s): Summary: Hacas Chapman Hendy argue in a report for the Housing Corporation that housing associations that respond to allegations of wrongdoing by investigating themselves are storing up problems for the future. An independent investigation was the most effective method. The study explores how RSL's have responded to allegations and what lessons can be learnt. For the study 'Responding to allegation': http://www.housingcorplibrary.org.uk/HousingCorp.nsf/AllDocuments/60A24CF2A079833780256BAA004D523E| Item type | Current library | Call number | Copy number | Status | Barcode | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| News article | London News article | WB3816-16 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 1 | Available | 117956-1001 |
Hacas Chapman Hendy argue in a report for the Housing Corporation that housing associations that respond to allegations of wrongdoing by investigating themselves are storing up problems for the future. An independent investigation was the most effective method. The study explores how RSL's have responded to allegations and what lessons can be learnt. For the study 'Responding to allegation': http://www.housingcorplibrary.org.uk/HousingCorp.nsf/AllDocuments/60A24CF2A079833780256BAA004D523E