Matches in SemOpenAlex for { <https://semopenalex.org/work/W3145803035> ?p ?o ?g. }
Showing items 1 to 60 of
60
with 100 items per page.
- W3145803035 abstract "Governments in general claim and promise to plan and design inhabitable city spaces for people. However, as we review current city projects, it is not difficult to notice that quite a lot of governments have continuously set up strategies and plans, and sought authority through legislation, to not so much design as control city spaces. When undertaking urban development projects, governments generally follow the planning principles of administrators who adhere to the deliberate forms of operational rationalism and, as a consequence, tend to neglect the human factors. They see rational planning as an active force and the only proper means of directing the community towards the ideal of social harmony. Governments also generally follow the planning principles of developers who openly maximise profit. On the other hand, in studies of the “sociology of everyday life,” sociologists such as Michel de Certeau, Henri Lefebvre, and Michel Maffesoli, point out that everyday life in modern society is organised according to a concerted programme, and that the urban setting is cybernetized. People’s everyday lives are embodied in the experience of a highly organised (or, programmed) society. These sociologists have conducted detailed studies on the everyday lives of common people (or, ordinary people), and offer designers as well as other professionals a new perspective from which to see everyday life and the responses of people to their programmed living environment. To explore this alternative perspective of theorists and sociologists, besides a literature review, longitudinal studies have been conducted along several traditional market streets in Hong Kong. These studies, which began in the early 1990s, aim to provide an in-depth investigation into users’ practices in everyday public spaces, and to shed light on design issues that are relevant to these spaces and that will generate insights for further discussion and investigation. In addition, this study also aims to help the reader become more familiar with the phenomenon so that the findings can prompt further research questions on potentially related processes and outcomes." @default.
- W3145803035 created "2021-04-13" @default.
- W3145803035 creator A5053972533 @default.
- W3145803035 date "2007-01-01" @default.
- W3145803035 modified "2023-09-25" @default.
- W3145803035 title "Guerrilla wars in everyday public spaces : reflections and inspirations for designers" @default.
- W3145803035 hasPublicationYear "2007" @default.
- W3145803035 type Work @default.
- W3145803035 sameAs 3145803035 @default.
- W3145803035 citedByCount "5" @default.
- W3145803035 countsByYear W31458030352014 @default.
- W3145803035 countsByYear W31458030352016 @default.
- W3145803035 countsByYear W31458030352019 @default.
- W3145803035 crossrefType "journal-article" @default.
- W3145803035 hasAuthorship W3145803035A5053972533 @default.
- W3145803035 hasConcept C138885662 @default.
- W3145803035 hasConcept C144024400 @default.
- W3145803035 hasConcept C17744445 @default.
- W3145803035 hasConcept C199539241 @default.
- W3145803035 hasConcept C2779018934 @default.
- W3145803035 hasConcept C2779913896 @default.
- W3145803035 hasConcept C3116431 @default.
- W3145803035 hasConcept C39549134 @default.
- W3145803035 hasConcept C95124753 @default.
- W3145803035 hasConceptScore W3145803035C138885662 @default.
- W3145803035 hasConceptScore W3145803035C144024400 @default.
- W3145803035 hasConceptScore W3145803035C17744445 @default.
- W3145803035 hasConceptScore W3145803035C199539241 @default.
- W3145803035 hasConceptScore W3145803035C2779018934 @default.
- W3145803035 hasConceptScore W3145803035C2779913896 @default.
- W3145803035 hasConceptScore W3145803035C3116431 @default.
- W3145803035 hasConceptScore W3145803035C39549134 @default.
- W3145803035 hasConceptScore W3145803035C95124753 @default.
- W3145803035 hasLocation W31458030351 @default.
- W3145803035 hasOpenAccess W3145803035 @default.
- W3145803035 hasPrimaryLocation W31458030351 @default.
- W3145803035 hasRelatedWork W1017323612 @default.
- W3145803035 hasRelatedWork W1491504725 @default.
- W3145803035 hasRelatedWork W1573152601 @default.
- W3145803035 hasRelatedWork W1687690583 @default.
- W3145803035 hasRelatedWork W169766360 @default.
- W3145803035 hasRelatedWork W1974325775 @default.
- W3145803035 hasRelatedWork W2035253811 @default.
- W3145803035 hasRelatedWork W2052845363 @default.
- W3145803035 hasRelatedWork W2066889964 @default.
- W3145803035 hasRelatedWork W2112666076 @default.
- W3145803035 hasRelatedWork W2135673874 @default.
- W3145803035 hasRelatedWork W2170223059 @default.
- W3145803035 hasRelatedWork W2286866983 @default.
- W3145803035 hasRelatedWork W2297946797 @default.
- W3145803035 hasRelatedWork W2403577715 @default.
- W3145803035 hasRelatedWork W3193335503 @default.
- W3145803035 hasRelatedWork W362557238 @default.
- W3145803035 hasRelatedWork W51411591 @default.
- W3145803035 hasRelatedWork W824011989 @default.
- W3145803035 hasRelatedWork W2507826285 @default.
- W3145803035 isParatext "false" @default.
- W3145803035 isRetracted "false" @default.
- W3145803035 magId "3145803035" @default.
- W3145803035 workType "article" @default.