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https://doi.org/10.17645/up.v7i4.5821

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Constructing Common Meeting Places: A Strategy for Mitigating the Social Isolation of Disadvantaged Neighbourhoods?

[journal article]

Carstensen, Trine Agervig
Skytt-Larsen, Christine Benna
Busck, Anne Gravsholt
Søraa, Nina Glomså

Abstract

Community planning has undergone changes in direction over time, from a traditional neighbourhood approach seeking to ensure well-functioning local communities to a newer focus on the feasibility of neighbourhood-based urban renewal for combating segregation. The latter initially concentrated on the... view more

Community planning has undergone changes in direction over time, from a traditional neighbourhood approach seeking to ensure well-functioning local communities to a newer focus on the feasibility of neighbourhood-based urban renewal for combating segregation. The latter initially concentrated on the internal social relations of disadvantaged neighbourhoods, but nowadays the focus for interventions is changing towards opening up such neighbourhoods to improve their external relations with more affluent surrounding districts. This article unfolds the visions related to a new urban planning strategy for constructing common meeting places inside disadvantaged neighbourhoods, which seem closely related to the political discourses about the need for opening these neighbourhoods up. Specifically, the article scrutinises the visions for two meeting places currently being constructed in two Danish neighbourhoods characterised as disadvantaged, and it examines which problems these meeting places seek to solve and how they are intended to provide for publicness. The study reveals that, despite being part of the same strategic funding programme and having similar problem framings, it is claimed that the two future meeting places will provide for publicness in distinct and context-specific ways. Furthermore, we show that the way problem representations entangled in specific political discourses are being manifested in specific local planning strategies may have contingent, yet potentially pervasive social and physical consequences for local neighbourhoods.... view less

Keywords
Denmark; public space; the public; social housing; urban renewal; social relations; segregation; social inequality; urban planning

Classification
Area Development Planning, Regional Research
Sociology of Settlements and Housing, Urban Sociology

Free Keywords
meeting places; neighbourhood planning; policy analysis; problem representation; publicness; social encounters

Document language
English

Publication Year
2022

Page/Pages
p. 486-498

Journal
Urban Planning, 7 (2022) 4

Issue topic
Localizing Social Infrastructures: Welfare, Equity, and Community

ISSN
2183-7635

Status
Published Version; peer reviewed

Licence
Creative Commons - Attribution 4.0


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© 2007 - 2025 Social Science Open Access Repository (SSOAR).
Based on DSpace, Copyright (c) 2002-2022, DuraSpace. All rights reserved.