Place identity

Place identity or place-based identity refers to a cluster of ideas about place and identity in the fields of geography, urban planning, urban design, landscape architecture, interior design, spatial design, environmental psychology, ecocriticism and urban sociology/ecological sociology. Place identity is sometimes called urban character, neighbourhood character or local character. Place identity has become a significant issue in the last 25 years in urban planning and design. Place identity concerns the meaning and significance of places for their inhabitants and users, and how these meanings contribute to individuals' conceptualizations of self. Place identity also relates to the context of modernity, history and the politics of representation.[1] In other words, historical determinism, which intersects historical events, social spaces and groups by gender, class, ethnicity.[1] In this way, it explores how spaces have evolved over time by exploring the social constructs through time and the development of space, place and power.[1] To the same extent, the politics of representation is brought into context, as the making of place identity in a community also relates to the exclusion or inclusion in a community. Through this, some have argued that place identity has become an area for social change because it gives marginalized communities agency[clarification needed] over their own spaces.[1] In the same respect, it is argued that place identity has also been used to intervene social change and perpetuate oppression from a top-down approach by creating segregated spaces for marginalized communities.[1]

  1. ^ a b c d e P., Smith, Michael; Thomas., Bender (2001). City and nation : rethinking place and identity. Transaction Publishers. ISBN 978-0765808714. OCLC 45636842.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)

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