Sign in
  • Home
  • About
  • Methodology
  • Meta-data and Definitions
  • Search the database
  • Explore research

SEARCH THE DATABASE

You can use AND, "+", OR, NOT and "-" as Boolean operators (please note: Boolean operators must be ALL CAPS).
The OR operator is the default conjunction operator for your search terms.
For your choice of AND or OR when using meta-data filtering, press the button below
OR AND
Show me all articles

Filter your search

Organizing Categories and Key Concepts(0)

Methods (0)

Disciplines (0)

Activities (0)

Physical Types (0)

Could not load search result, try reloading the page.
Found 4 match(es) for your search terms and/or filters.
shows 1 to 4
Women's use of public space and sense of place in the Raval (Barcelona)
GeoJournal (2004)
Anna Ortiz, Maria Dolors Garcia-Ramon & Maria Prats
This article deals with women's use of public space and sense of place in El Raval, a neighbourhood located in the historical center of Barcelona. Attention will be paid to discover to what degree the existence of a quality public space fosters the creation of socially meaningful places, thus contributing to the construction of women's sense of place and urban identities. A qualitative approach, based on direct observation and in-depth interviews with women living in the neighbourhood, has allowed us to capture the main aspects of the building of a sense of place and belonging, that is the use of public space and facilities, the attitude towards living in the neighbourhood, etc.
View article
Fighting for the global catwalk: Formalizing public life in Castlefield (Manchester) and diluting public life in el Raval (Barcelona)
International Journal of Urban and Regional Research (2003)
Degen, M.
Article contains no Abstract.
View article
Enforcing Borders in the Nuevo South
Gender & Society (2008)
Natalia Deeb-Sossa & Jennifer Bickham Mendez
Drawing from ethnographic research in the Research Triangle of North Carolina and Williamsburg, Virginia, the authors build on Anzaldúa’s conceptualization of “borderlands” to analyze how borders of social membership are constructed and enforced in “el Nuevo South.” Our gender analysis reveals that intersecting structural conditions—the labor market, the organization of public space, and the institutional organization of health care and other public services—combine with gendered processes in the home and family to regulate women’s participation in community life. Enforcers of borders include institutional actors, mostly women, in social services and clinics who occupy institutional locations that enable them to define who is entitled to public goods and to categorize migrants as undeserving “others.” We reveal how a particularly configured matrix of domination transcends the spheres of home, work, and community to constrain women migrants’ physical and economic mobility and personal autonomy and to inhibit their participation in their societies of reception.
View article
Disruption, yet community reconstitution: subverting the privatization of Latin American plazas
GeoJournal (2012)
Veronica Crossa
Latin American scholars have recently discussed the privatization of urban public space. A fundamental aspect of this process is the disintegration of communities because it often targets and affects a peculiarly Latin American kind of public space: the plaza. Plazas have traditionally functioned as cultural centres in Latin American cites. They are central meeting points for political groups, sites of civic expression and public resistance, as well as places to purchase relatively cheap goods and services. Plazas are, therefore, sites in which families, neighbours, and political organizations mingle, interact, and also challenge authority. This paper uses these sorts of insights on public space in Latin America to develop a conceptualization of the plaza as a community centre. However, the multiple practices and interactions that occur in these forms of public space have been disrupted by state-led strategies which seek to privatize and sanitize public space, thereby disrupting—or even destroying—the community centre. I use primary materials on Mexico City's Historic centre and its plaza to explore the ways in which this specific type of urban public space has been affected physically and symbolically by a regeneration scheme known as the Programa de Rescate.
View article
  • 1
Export search results
© 2025 - TERRA PUBLICA
Get in touch Privacy Cookies