People's Spaces
Coping, Familiarizing, Creating
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Taylor & Francis Ltd
Published:2nd Nov '15
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
This hardback is available in another edition too:
- Paperback£53.99(9780415720298)
Who controls space? Powerful corporations, institutions, and individuals have great power to create physical and political space through income and influence. People’s Spaces attempts to understand the struggle between people and institutions in the spaces they make.
Current literature on cities and planning often looks at popular resistance to institutional authority through open, mass-movement protest. These views overlook the fact that subaltern classes are not often afforded the luxury of open, organized political protest. People’s Spaces investigates individual’s diverse approaches in reconciling the difference between their spatial needs and spatial availability. Through case studies in Southeast Asia, India, Nepal, and Central Asia, the book explores how people accommodate their spatial needs for everyday activities and cultural practices within a larger abstract spatial context produced by the power-holders.
"That the making of urban space and life is largely located in the systematic, impetuous, and equivocal efforts of the majority of a city’s inhabitants, and which persist in spite of the impositions and destructions of both well-known and unfamiliar forces, remains an interminable reality and conundrum. For the ordinary contributions of this majority are undervalued to the extent of being rendered invisible or irrelevant. But by offering a sweeping historical account across varied Asian contexts and circumstances—particularly that of his war-torn homeland-- Perera restores the breadth of the creation, adjustments and intersections at work in how such contributions confront all kinds of disasters, dispossessions and potentials as a vital common sense. There is no book I know that so clearly renders apparently shrinking horizons into testaments of uneasy endurance."- AbdouMaliq Simone, Research Professor, Max Planck Institute for the Study of Religious and Ethnic Diversity
"Advocating for ‘grounded, bottom-up, community-based’ approaches to planning is meaningless without knowledge of how ‘lived spaces’ are created. The main objective ofPeople’s Spacesis, therefore, to illustrate how people, through ‘coping, familiarizing, and creating’, transform abstract spaces into lived spaces even in the most constrained environments and restrictive regulatory frameworks. People’s Spacesis about homes, neighbourhoods and communities; the social relations that define them, and the particular socio-cultural meanings that people attach to them."- Asha L Abeyasekera, Faculty of Graduate Studies, University of Colombo, Sri Lanka
ISBN: 9780415720281
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: 566g
260 pages