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OverviewCommunities on Britain's margins, left alone by the centres of power, are boldly rewriting the future, reclaiming and reimagining neglected land and buildings to prepare all of us for the uncertainties ahead. 'Frontierlands' are Britain's forgotten places. Silt-filled harbours, overgrown forests, sunken railway tracks and empty buildings. All once economic engines, now abandoned by investors and the state. But they are home to local communities, and amongst them, some remarkable pioneers working together to repair, rebuild and prepare for the future. Hazel Sheffield takes her readers on a journey that begins at the coastline and travels inward via hoardings and railway arches, factories, streets and neighbourhoods to our homes. Moving from Watchet harbour in the South West to Gateshead in the North East, from Lancashire to London and the South East, she introduces us to the people who are acting to shape their own destinies - people with first-hand knowledge of the problems Britain faces and with clear ideas how to make things better. This is a book about regeneration, reclaiming power, and the hope that comes from community action. About people questioning how the world works and determined to do things differently in the face of economic upheaval and climate crisis. People learning to build a new world, challenging us all to think about how we should live in the face of certain change. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Hazel SheffieldPublisher: Transworld Publishers Ltd Imprint: Torva Dimensions: Width: 13.80cm , Height: 4.00cm , Length: 22.20cm Weight: 0.500kg ISBN: 9781911709312ISBN 10: 1911709313 Pages: 384 Publication Date: 05 February 2026 Audience: General/trade , Professional and scholarly , College/higher education , General , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Forthcoming Availability: To order Table of ContentsReviewsA compelling account of how derelict neighbourhoods and abandoned buildings have become a new frontier for community development, seedbeds of renewal, creativity, and social justice ... Read one page, and you will want to keep reading. In the end, you may want to grab a work belt or spade and create a “lifescape”, a renewed commons that is the basis of a flourishing social life. -- Paul Hawken, author of Regeneration Wrapped within the beauty of this book is a clarion call for a deeper understanding of our most precious spaces and the people within them. Remarkable, exquisitely researched and acutely observed, it won’t leave me. -- Lucy Easthope, author of When the Dust Settles This is not just a grassroots manual for 21st century survival – groundswelling and prophetic, it could be a startling blueprint for life in the 22nd. -- Tom Nancollas, author of Seashaken Houses We've all heard a lot about broken Britain; Sheffield's informative, lyrical and uplifting narrative centres around those busily engaged in mending it. An all-to-often overlooked kind of kintsugi. This is a book for now, when so many feel jaded, worn thin and in desperate need of hope. -- Kassia St Clair, author of The Secret Lives of Colour A lyrical and vivid portrayal of communities struggling to build ecologies of care, solidarity, and responsibility against interlaced histories of exploitation and exclusion. Compelling and deeply life-affirming. -- Davina Cooper, author of Everyday Utopias This is the right book, at the right time…I defy you to feel hopeless or depressed about the world after reading this book. It's a battle cry, a playbook – and, above all, a warm and beautifully drawn portrait of determined, inspired humans – many of them women – creating positive and lasting change. -- Isabel Berwick, author of The Future-Proof Career Hazel Sheffield's book is a warming remedy to the creeping nihilism many feel about the places where they live, and their power to have a hand in changing them. The resourceful communities, partnerships and collectives she encounters in Frontierlands are frequently only just getting started in building something and setting down roots, and their attempts and battles, laid out here with deep feeling, have the potential to get many more people to start claiming space - maybe even an entire generation or two. -- Jen Calleja, author of Vehicle: a verse novel. Frontierlands is a handbook of hope and regeneration. We learn about the old ways that are being unearthed and reimagined for a very different future. We meet people who are rebuilding not only homes, neighbourhoods and organisations, but also relationships, ideas, and sprits. It is a book about collective vision and stewardship, born for such fractured times as these, and Hazel Sheffield — with her deep and wide knowledge of the alternatives to the status quo that are being built at the edges — is the perfect guide. -- Elizabeth Wainwright, author and community worker Author InformationHazel Sheffield is a business reporter and investigative journalist. Her work can be found in national and international publications including the Guardian, Follow the Money and the Financial Times. Before going freelance, she covered derivatives for Euromoney and worked as the business editor of the Independent. She left the Independent in the summer of 2016 to start a grant-funded project called farnearer.org, documenting self-organising communities and economic alternatives in the UK. After a decade of reporting, that work has come together as Frontierlands, her first book. She lives with her family in Hastings. 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