Benefits Street, Brighton Dickens having been such a prolific writer, and so many of his books having been made into films, it’s not remarkable that, for most people, his depictions of life in the Workhouse and the slums – and the effect of that life on children - hit a National chord. For most of his reading public variations on Dickensian themes have been the standard template for depictions of poverty and inequality. Remarkable as it might seem, it would appear that Mears staff – or at least the only staff we of the great unwashed have access to – have likewise reached adulthood familiar with these tropes. (Though I mentioned the films which could be the only explanation for any source of knowledge in some cases). For without doubt, whenever I meet with others whose buildings...