Domestication by cappuccino or a revenge on urban space? Control and empowerment in the management of public spaces
Atkinson, Rowland G. (2003) Domestication by cappuccino or a revenge on urban space? Control and empowerment in the management of public spaces. Urban Studies, 40 (9). pp. 1829-1843. ISSN 0042-0980 | PDF - Full text restricted - Requires a PDF viewer 124Kb | |
Official URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/0042098032000106627 AbstractThis paper explores some of the more extreme tendencies in the management of public space to consider whether current policy directions, in this case in central Scotland, are
driven by a desire to empower or control users of such spaces. The title of the paper is taken from the theoretical lenses provided by Neil Smith and Sharon Zukin in their differential views on trends in the management and control of public spaces. The paper focuses on two local case
studies to examine the possibility that a ‘revanchist’ element is emerging in policies towards public spaces in Britain. The paper concludes that programmes designed to deal with urban and public space are a reaction to both real and perceived problems. However, there has been a
privileging of a policy discourse which celebrates the displacement of social problems rather than their resolution. It is argued that such a discourse cannot ultimately provide sustainable policies for the regulation of public spaces and threatens the inclusion of some users of public spaces who may not be considered to be legitimate patrons. While this does more to foster fearful than
inclusive public spaces, a thorny question remains over whether some degree of exclusion is a necessary price for policies which seek to secure public space and maintain a wider quality of life. Repository Staff Only: item control page
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