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Found 272 match(es) for your search terms and/or filters.
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Planning in the Public Domain: Discourse and Praxis
Journal of Planning Education and Research (1989)
Friedmann, J.
N/A
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Can streets be made safe?
(2018)
Hillier B
N/A
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Human Spatial Behavior
Annual Review of Sociology (1978)
Mark Baldassare
N/A
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An evidence based approach to crime and urban design - Or, can we have vitality, sustainability and security all at once?
(2018)
Hillier B and Sahbaz, O
N/A
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From “street” to “piazza”: Urban politics, public ceremony, and the redefinition of platea in communal Italy and beyond
Speculum (2016)
Dey, H.
N/A
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Loose Space: Possibility and Diversity in Urban Life – Edited by Karen A. Franck and Quentin Steven
International journal of urban and regional research (2012)
Aceska, A.
N/A
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On the Contours of Public Space: A Tale of Three Women
Antipode (1998)
Liz Bondi & Mona Domosh
N/A
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Rethinking Urban Parks. Public Space and Cultural Diversity – Setha Low, Dana Taplin and Suzanne Scheld
International Journal of Urban and Regional Research (2006)
Soenen, R.
N/A
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A walk around the block
Landscape: Magazine of Human Geography (1960)
Lynch, K., & Rivkin, M
N/A
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Public space as emancipation: Meditations on anarchism, radical democracy, neoliberalism and violence
Antipode (2010)
Springer, S.
N/A
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Space, Place and the City: Emerging Research on Public Space Design and Planning
Journal of Urban Design (2010)
Stephan Schmidt & Jeremy Németh
Introduction to special issue. No abstract available.
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Mobile social networks and urban public space.
New media & society (2010)
Humphreys, L.
The development and proliferation of mobile social networks have the potential to transform ways that people come together and interact in public space.These services allow new kinds of information to flow into public spaces and, as such, can rearrange social and spatial practices. Dodgeball is used as a case study of mobile social networks. Based on a year-long qualitative field study, this article explores how Dodgeball was used to facilitate social congregation in public spaces and begins to expand our understanding of traditional notions of space and social interaction. Drawing on the concept of parochial space, this article examines how ideas of mobile communication and public space are negotiated in the everyday practice and use of mobile social networks.
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Homeless youth and the politics of redevelopment
PoLAR: Political and Legal Anthropology Review (2000)
Hyde, J.
N/A
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Why farm the city? Theorizing urban agriculture through a lens of metabolic rift
Cambridge Journal of Regions, Economy and Society (2010)
N. McClintock
Urban agriculture (UA) is spreading across vacant and marginal land worldwide, embraced by government and civil society as source of food, ecosystems services and jobs, particularly in times of economic crisis. ‘Metabolic rift' is an effective framework for differentiating UA's multiple origins and functions across the Global North and South. I examine how UA arises from three interrelated dimensions of metabolic rift—ecological, social and individual. By rescaling production, reclaiming vacant land and ‘de-alienating’ urban dwellers from their food, UA also attempts to overcome these forms of rift. Considering all three dimensions is valuable both for theory and practice.
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Cross-cultural patterns in mobile-phone use: public space and reachability in Sweden, the USA and Japan
New media & society (2010)
Baron, N. S., & Segerstad, Y. H. af.
Contemporary mobile-phone technology is becoming increasingly similar around the world. However, cultural differences between countries may also shape mobile-phone practices. This study examines a group of variables connected to mobile-phone use among university students in Sweden, the USA and Japan. Key cultural issues addressed are attitudes towards quiet in public space, personal use of public space and tolerance of self-expression. Measures include the appropriateness of using mobiles in various social contexts and judgments of what respondents like most and like least about having a mobile phone. Analysis revealed a number of culturally associated differences, as well as a shared conflicting attitude towards the advantages and disadvantages of reachability by mobile phone.
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Penny for Your Thoughts: Beggars and the Exercise of Morality in Daily Life1
Sociological Forum (2012)
Shai M. Dromi
Urban sociology has tended to study interactions between passersby and "street persons" with an emphasis on the ways street persons become bothersome, harassing, or dangerous. This article moves away from the focus on the ways interactions in public go awry and focuses on how individuals account for the mundane, everyday exchanges they have with strangers who seek their help. Based on interview data (N = 31) and qualitative analysis of data from an Internet survey (N = 110), this article suggests that the presence of beggars does not inherently symbolize urban decay to passersby and does not necessarily elicit anxiety, but instead provides a valuable texture of urban life. Further, the article argues that individuals, when justifying their responses to requests for help from needy persons (beggars) in urban spaces, use a variety of cultural strategies to maintain their perception of themselves as moral persons, both when they choose to help and when they refuse. Drawing from these findings, the article suggests that urban sociology and the sociology of risk would benefit from sensitizing their studies of public interactions to the diverse meanings individuals assign to them, rather than presupposing annoyance, anxiety, or fear as their predominant characteristic.
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Acts of union: Youth sub-culture and ethnic identity amongst Protestants in Northern Ireland
The British Journal of Sociology (1987)
Bell, D.
N/A
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Perception of Personal Safety in Urban Recreation Sites
Journal of leisure research (1984)
Schroeder W. Herbert and Anderson L. M.
Photographs of 17 urban recreation sites in Chicago and Atlanta were evaluated by college strudents (n=68) in Illinois, Georgia, and Michigan, for either perceived security, scenic quality or both. For most raters, high visibility and developed park features significantly enhanced perceived security. Scenic quality, on the other hand, was enhanced for the majority of evaluators by a high degree of naturalness and vegetation. For both perceived safety and scenic quality a small minority of raters held preferences quite different from the majority.
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Permitting protest: Parsing the fine geography of dissent in America
International Journal of Urban and Regional Research (2005)
Mitchell, D., & Staeheli, L. A.
N/A
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Revanchist sanitisation or coercive care? The use of enforcement to combat begging, street drinking and rough sleeping in England
Urban Studies (2010)
Johnsen, S., & Fitzpatrick, S.
This paper examines recent responses to 'problematic street culture' in England, where increasing pressure has been exerted to prevent people from begging and street drinking in public spaces, with rough sleeping also targeted in some areas. Drawing upon in-depth interviews with enforcement agents, support providers and targeted individuals, it assesses the extent to which the strategies employed are indicative of a Revanchist expulsion' of the deviant Other and/or an expression of 'coercive care' for the vulnerable Other. It concludes that, whilst the recent developments appear, at first glance, to be symptomatic of revanchist sanitisation of public space, closer examination reveals that the situation is actually much more complex than a revanchist reading of the situation might suggest, and perhaps not as devoid of compassion.
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