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Public Spaces, Private Spaces, And The Right To The City

Stefano Moroni, Francesco Chiodelli.

Overview

Two arguments have recently strongly influenced the theory and practice of planning: (i) public space is what basically characterises any city (the citizen's right to the city is first and foremost a claim on public space); (ii) public space is crucial because it provides the physical fulcrum for public interaction and political debate. This article takes a critical look at these two ideas, highlighting: (i) that private spaces have also crucially contributed (and continue to do so) to defining and determining what a city is – the city cannot be conceived without considering both public and private spaces and the crucial synergy between these two spheres; (ii) that the public sphere does not come into being solely in public spaces (as testified by the Internet); furthermore, public spaces perform other roles and functions (besides making debate and confrontation possible), and these various roles may at times clash with each other. All these aspects suggest a more balanced approach to the understanding of urban spaces and their importance

ISBN
Category Urban Studies
Call number HT166 M67 2014
Physical description 16 pages:24 cm.
Edition year 2014
Bibliographical references? Yes
Publisher name N/A
Publication year 2014
Place of publication N/A
Language English
Is series? No

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