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“Used book in good condition. Shows typical wear. Quick shipping. Satisfaction guaranteed!”
Narrative Type
Racing
Type
Book
Intended Audience
N/A
ISBN
9780262539784

Über dieses Produkt

Product Identifiers

Publisher
MIT Press
ISBN-10
0262539780
ISBN-13
9780262539784
eBay Product ID (ePID)
11050019483

Product Key Features

Book Title
Owning the Street : the Everyday Life of Property
Number of Pages
344 Pages
Language
English
Publication Year
2020
Topic
Public Policy / City Planning & Urban Development, General, Sociology / Urban
Illustrator
Yes
Genre
Transportation, Political Science, Social Science
Author
Amelia Thorpe
Book Series
Urban and Industrial Environments Ser.
Format
Trade Paperback

Dimensions

Item Height
0.7 in
Item Weight
19.6 Oz
Item Length
10.8 in
Item Width
6 in

Additional Product Features

Intended Audience
Trade
LCCN
2020-002966
Reviews
Shortlisted for the Socio-Legal Theory and History Prize from the Socio-Legal Studies Association " Owning the Street should be essential reading for property scholars and for all those using property to understand issues related to citizenship, agency, power, and urban governance." -- Contemporary Sociology " Owning the Street: The Everyday Life of Property is invaluable for everyone interested in the future of cities and especially for those in search of novel ways to radically accomplish incremental change through continued civic creativity, committed talent, and dedication." -- Landscape Journal "Interrelationships between sociology, law and planning are not much explored in scholarly and professional fields of planning, to put it mildly. Amelia Thorpe's publication, Owning the Street , gives a wonderful demonstration of the significance of adopting just such an interdisciplinary perspective. [ . . . ] This inspiring book must be used and discussed in bachelor or master classes of planning schools." -- Planning Theory " Amelia Thorpe's Owning the Street: The Everyday Life of Property is a thought-provoking scholarship on the role of user-generated urbanism in shaping the contemporary metropolis. [ . . . ] Thorpe weaves magic through her captivating story-telling style backed by state-of-the-art research to elucidate the role of PARK(ing) Day as a compelling idea which disrupts the status quo to be a zeitgeist, which could revolutionise the contemporary socio-political discourse and inspire the readers to work for a sustainable future." -- Emotion, Space and Society "Owning the Street is an engaging, charmingly authentic work that highlights how property is too frequently overlooked as local, small-scale, and vernacular. [ . . . ] [It] is an important addition to the burgeoning scholarship of critical property theory and its intersections with the city. Thorpe takes a quirky, playful, and above all transitory intervention into public space, and yields a work that is rich, creative, and enduring in its significance to law, property, and social politics." -- Legalities "Thorough, thoughtful, and nuanced." --Journal of Sociology, Shortlisted for the Socio-Legal Theory and History Prize from the Socio-Legal Studies Association " Owning the Street should be essential reading for property scholars and for all those using property to understand issues related to citizenship, agency, power, and urban governance." -- Contemporary Sociology " Owning the Street: The Everyday Life of Property is invaluable for everyone interested in the future of cities and especially for those in search of novel ways to radically accomplish incremental change through continued civic creativity, committed talent, and dedication." -- Landscape Journal "Interrelationships between sociology, law and planning are not much explored in scholarly and professional fields of planning, to put it mildly. Amelia Thorpe's publication, Owning the Street , gives a wonderful demonstration of the significance of adopting just such an interdisciplinary perspective. [ . . . ] This inspiring book must be used and discussed in bachelor or master classes of planning schools." -- Planning Theory " Amelia Thorpe's Owning the Street: The Everyday Life of Property is a thought-provoking scholarship on the role of user-generated urbanism in shaping the contemporary metropolis. [ . . . ] Thorpe weaves magic through her captivating story-telling style backed by state-of-the-art research to elucidate the role of PARK(ing) Day as a compelling idea which disrupts the status quo to be a zeitgeist, which could revolutionise the contemporary socio-political discourse and inspire the readers to work for a sustainable future." -- Emotion, Space and Society "Owning the Street is an engaging, charmingly authentic work that highlights how property is too frequently overlooked as local, small-scale, and vernacular. [ . . . ] [It] is an important addition to the burgeoning scholarship of critical property theory and its intersections with the city. Thorpe takes a quirky, playful, and above all transitory intervention into public space, and yields a work that is rich, creative, and enduring in its significance to law, property, and social politics." -- Legalities, Shortlisted for the Socio-Legal Theory and History Prize from the Socio-Legal Studies Association " Owning the Street: The Everyday Life of Property is invaluable for everyone interested in the future of cities and especially for those in search of novel ways to radically accomplish incremental change through continued civic creativity, committed talent, and dedication." -- Landscape Journal "Interrelationships between sociology, law and planning are not much explored in scholarly and professional fields of planning, to put it mildly. Amelia Thorpe's publication, Owning the Street , gives a wonderful demonstration of the significance of adopting just such an interdisciplinary perspective. [ . . . ] This inspiring book must be used and discussed in bachelor or master classes of planning schools." -- Planning Theory " Amelia Thorpe's Owning the Street: The Everyday Life of Property is a thought-provoking scholarship on the role of user-generated urbanism in shaping the contemporary metropolis. [ . . . ] Thorpe weaves magic through her captivating story-telling style backed by state-of-the-art research to elucidate the role of PARK(ing) Day as a compelling idea which disrupts the status quo to be a zeitgeist, which could revolutionise the contemporary socio-political discourse and inspire the readers to work for a sustainable future." -- Emotion, Space and Society "Owning the Street is an engaging, charmingly authentic work that highlights how property is too frequently overlooked as local, small-scale, and vernacular. [ . . . ] [It] is an important addition to the burgeoning scholarship of critical property theory and its intersections with the city. Thorpe takes a quirky, playful, and above all transitory intervention into public space, and yields a work that is rich, creative, and enduring in its significance to law, property, and social politics." -- Legalities, " Owning the Street: The Everyday Life of Property is invaluable for everyone interested in the future of cities and especially for those in search of novel ways to radically accomplish incremental change through continued civic creativity, committed talent, and dedication."-- Landscape Journal "Interrelationships between sociology, law and planning are not much explored in scholarly and professional fields of planning, to put it mildly. Amelia Thorpe's publication, Owning the Street , gives a wonderful demonstration of the significance of adopting just such an interdisciplinary perspective. [ . . . ] This inspiring book must be used and discussed in bachelor or master classes of planning schools."-- Planning Theory
Table Of Content
Introduction Part One: A PARK(ing) Movement? 1 From PARK(ing) to PARK(ing) Day 2 Moving Things Along Part Two: Property and the Performance of Legality 3 PARK(ing) Law: Pluralism and Performance 4 Properties of PARK(ing) 5 Building Ownership 6 Performing Property Part Three: Politics and Possibility 7 Products of PARK(ing) Postscript Notes Index
Synopsis
How local, specific, and personal understandings about belonging, ownership, and agency intersect with law to shape the city. In Owning the Street , Amelia Thorpe examines everyday experiences of and feelings about property and belonging in contemporary cities. She grounds her account in an empirical study of PARK(ing) Day, an annual event that reclaims street space from cars. A popular and highly recognizable example of DIY Urbanism, PARK(ing) Day has attracted considerable media attention, but has not yet been the subject of close scholarly examination. Focusing on the event's trajectories in San Francisco, Sydney, and Montreal, Thorpe addresses this gap, making use of extensive interview data, field work, and careful reflection to explore these tiny, temporary, and often transformative interventions.
LC Classification Number
HE336.P37T46 2018

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