Planning for AuthentiCITIES
Herausgeber: Tate, Laura; Shannon, Brettany
Planning for AuthentiCITIES
Herausgeber: Tate, Laura; Shannon, Brettany
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This book sheds new light in considering the role of community planning in addressing community and neighbourhood authenticity.
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This book sheds new light in considering the role of community planning in addressing community and neighbourhood authenticity.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 392
- Erscheinungstermin: 19. Juli 2018
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 24mm
- Gewicht: 717g
- ISBN-13: 9780815384908
- ISBN-10: 0815384904
- Artikelnr.: 53456519
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 392
- Erscheinungstermin: 19. Juli 2018
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 24mm
- Gewicht: 717g
- ISBN-13: 9780815384908
- ISBN-10: 0815384904
- Artikelnr.: 53456519
Laura Tate, PhD (University of British Columbia), is an urban planning scholar, lecturer and consultant. Laura has an extensive practice background in city planning and public health. She lives in Victoria, British Columbia, and has most recently held the position of Visiting Lecturer at the California Polytechnic State University. Brettany Shannon, PhD in Urban Planning and Development (University of Southern California), studies how media arts and digital communications intersect with urban and social placemaking. As the USC Bedrosian Center for Governance Scholar-in-Residence, she continues her research in the interview-based podcast, Los Angeles Hashtags Itself.
Introduction: Planning for AuthentiCITIES Part I: Mooring Chapter 1:
Chinatown, not Coffeetown: Authenticity and placemaking in Vancouver's
Chinatown Chapter 2: Neighbourhood authenticity and sense of place Chapter
3: Urban authenticity as a panacea for urban disorder? Business improvement
areas, cultural power, and the worlds of justification Chapter 4: A
framework of neighbourhood authenticity for urban planning: Three aspects
and three types of change Chapter 5: Negotiating diversity: The
transitioning Greektown of Baltimore City, Maryland Chapter 6: Planning and
authenticity: A materialist and phronetic perspective Part II: Performing
Chapter 7: Authenticity makes the city: How "the authentic" affects the
production of space Chapter 8: Authenticity's many performances in the
urban studies literature Chapter 9: Tactical urbanism as the staging of
social authenticity Chapter 10: Sincerity, performative authenticity, and
tourism in New Orleans Chapter 11: Gardening in America Chapter 12:
Utilizing comical mascots (yuru-kyara) to create city authenticity?
Chapter 13: Authentic Downtown Project: Intentional community-making in the
digital age Part III: Healing Chapter 14: Relocated authenticity:
Placemaking in displacement in southern Taiwan Chapter 15: Coding the
"authenti-city": North Harbour and Århusgade Quarter, Copenhagen Chapter
16: Diálogos for Latino Communities Chapter 17: Planning for
reconciliation: Indigenous authenticity in community engagement and urban
planning in Canadian cities Chapter 18: Urban-social imaginaries of
authenticity-and the John Lennon Wall
Chinatown, not Coffeetown: Authenticity and placemaking in Vancouver's
Chinatown Chapter 2: Neighbourhood authenticity and sense of place Chapter
3: Urban authenticity as a panacea for urban disorder? Business improvement
areas, cultural power, and the worlds of justification Chapter 4: A
framework of neighbourhood authenticity for urban planning: Three aspects
and three types of change Chapter 5: Negotiating diversity: The
transitioning Greektown of Baltimore City, Maryland Chapter 6: Planning and
authenticity: A materialist and phronetic perspective Part II: Performing
Chapter 7: Authenticity makes the city: How "the authentic" affects the
production of space Chapter 8: Authenticity's many performances in the
urban studies literature Chapter 9: Tactical urbanism as the staging of
social authenticity Chapter 10: Sincerity, performative authenticity, and
tourism in New Orleans Chapter 11: Gardening in America Chapter 12:
Utilizing comical mascots (yuru-kyara) to create city authenticity?
Chapter 13: Authentic Downtown Project: Intentional community-making in the
digital age Part III: Healing Chapter 14: Relocated authenticity:
Placemaking in displacement in southern Taiwan Chapter 15: Coding the
"authenti-city": North Harbour and Århusgade Quarter, Copenhagen Chapter
16: Diálogos for Latino Communities Chapter 17: Planning for
reconciliation: Indigenous authenticity in community engagement and urban
planning in Canadian cities Chapter 18: Urban-social imaginaries of
authenticity-and the John Lennon Wall
Introduction: Planning for AuthentiCITIES Part I: Mooring Chapter 1:
Chinatown, not Coffeetown: Authenticity and placemaking in Vancouver's
Chinatown Chapter 2: Neighbourhood authenticity and sense of place Chapter
3: Urban authenticity as a panacea for urban disorder? Business improvement
areas, cultural power, and the worlds of justification Chapter 4: A
framework of neighbourhood authenticity for urban planning: Three aspects
and three types of change Chapter 5: Negotiating diversity: The
transitioning Greektown of Baltimore City, Maryland Chapter 6: Planning and
authenticity: A materialist and phronetic perspective Part II: Performing
Chapter 7: Authenticity makes the city: How "the authentic" affects the
production of space Chapter 8: Authenticity's many performances in the
urban studies literature Chapter 9: Tactical urbanism as the staging of
social authenticity Chapter 10: Sincerity, performative authenticity, and
tourism in New Orleans Chapter 11: Gardening in America Chapter 12:
Utilizing comical mascots (yuru-kyara) to create city authenticity?
Chapter 13: Authentic Downtown Project: Intentional community-making in the
digital age Part III: Healing Chapter 14: Relocated authenticity:
Placemaking in displacement in southern Taiwan Chapter 15: Coding the
"authenti-city": North Harbour and Århusgade Quarter, Copenhagen Chapter
16: Diálogos for Latino Communities Chapter 17: Planning for
reconciliation: Indigenous authenticity in community engagement and urban
planning in Canadian cities Chapter 18: Urban-social imaginaries of
authenticity-and the John Lennon Wall
Chinatown, not Coffeetown: Authenticity and placemaking in Vancouver's
Chinatown Chapter 2: Neighbourhood authenticity and sense of place Chapter
3: Urban authenticity as a panacea for urban disorder? Business improvement
areas, cultural power, and the worlds of justification Chapter 4: A
framework of neighbourhood authenticity for urban planning: Three aspects
and three types of change Chapter 5: Negotiating diversity: The
transitioning Greektown of Baltimore City, Maryland Chapter 6: Planning and
authenticity: A materialist and phronetic perspective Part II: Performing
Chapter 7: Authenticity makes the city: How "the authentic" affects the
production of space Chapter 8: Authenticity's many performances in the
urban studies literature Chapter 9: Tactical urbanism as the staging of
social authenticity Chapter 10: Sincerity, performative authenticity, and
tourism in New Orleans Chapter 11: Gardening in America Chapter 12:
Utilizing comical mascots (yuru-kyara) to create city authenticity?
Chapter 13: Authentic Downtown Project: Intentional community-making in the
digital age Part III: Healing Chapter 14: Relocated authenticity:
Placemaking in displacement in southern Taiwan Chapter 15: Coding the
"authenti-city": North Harbour and Århusgade Quarter, Copenhagen Chapter
16: Diálogos for Latino Communities Chapter 17: Planning for
reconciliation: Indigenous authenticity in community engagement and urban
planning in Canadian cities Chapter 18: Urban-social imaginaries of
authenticity-and the John Lennon Wall