Invisible Bricks: urban places for social wellbeing

Social sustainability in urban places is undervalued in urban planning due to the intangible nature of the concept. By valuing lived experiences of place, this research connects social and environmental sustainability pillars to support planning for socioenvironmental justice from a citizen’s perspe...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autor principal: Arnett, Hannah
Formato: Second cycle, A2E
Lenguaje:sueco
Inglés
Publicado: 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/16290/
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author Arnett, Hannah
author_browse Arnett, Hannah
author_facet Arnett, Hannah
author_sort Arnett, Hannah
collection Epsilon Archive for Student Projects
description Social sustainability in urban places is undervalued in urban planning due to the intangible nature of the concept. By valuing lived experiences of place, this research connects social and environmental sustainability pillars to support planning for socioenvironmental justice from a citizen’s perspective. The quality of the urban outdoor environment is explored in relation to safety and individual and collective efficacy for social wellbeing which contextualises the role of urban green space. This study suggests socio-environmental sustainability is related at an individual and collective level. Safe social environments can support place attachment processes and safe green spaces can support self-regulation of emotions that influences behaviours. The urban outdoors can be viewed as a social learning environment. An inductive interpretative phenomenological analysis (IPA) led enquiry has been conducted which suggests urban places for social wellbeing can be explained by a framework that integrates social and environmental psychology and spatial politics theories. This study suggests that place attachment is at the heart of dynamic social environments and influences social learning behaviours through vicarious learning and the manifestation of social spaces as framed by Scannell and Gifford’s Tripartite Framework of Place Attachment, Bandura’s Social Cognitive Theory and Lefebvre’s Theory of Produced Social Space. Designing for socio-environmental justice is associated with understanding human irrationality due to poor social and environmental quality. This research suggests the right to feeling safe and the quality of the urban environment, including safe green spaces, becomes an issue for the operation of democracy and facilitating self and collective efficacy, by recognising the invisible bricks that form urban places for social wellbeing.
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spelling RepoSLU162902020-11-19T02:00:56Z https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/16290/ Invisible Bricks: urban places for social wellbeing Arnett, Hannah Landscape architecture Social sustainability in urban places is undervalued in urban planning due to the intangible nature of the concept. By valuing lived experiences of place, this research connects social and environmental sustainability pillars to support planning for socioenvironmental justice from a citizen’s perspective. The quality of the urban outdoor environment is explored in relation to safety and individual and collective efficacy for social wellbeing which contextualises the role of urban green space. This study suggests socio-environmental sustainability is related at an individual and collective level. Safe social environments can support place attachment processes and safe green spaces can support self-regulation of emotions that influences behaviours. The urban outdoors can be viewed as a social learning environment. An inductive interpretative phenomenological analysis (IPA) led enquiry has been conducted which suggests urban places for social wellbeing can be explained by a framework that integrates social and environmental psychology and spatial politics theories. This study suggests that place attachment is at the heart of dynamic social environments and influences social learning behaviours through vicarious learning and the manifestation of social spaces as framed by Scannell and Gifford’s Tripartite Framework of Place Attachment, Bandura’s Social Cognitive Theory and Lefebvre’s Theory of Produced Social Space. Designing for socio-environmental justice is associated with understanding human irrationality due to poor social and environmental quality. This research suggests the right to feeling safe and the quality of the urban environment, including safe green spaces, becomes an issue for the operation of democracy and facilitating self and collective efficacy, by recognising the invisible bricks that form urban places for social wellbeing. 2020-11-13 Second cycle, A2E NonPeerReviewed application/pdf sv https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/16290/3/arnett_h_201118.pdf Arnett, Hannah, 2019. Invisible Bricks: urban places for social wellbeing : a lived experience of place in the London borough of Tower Hamlets, UK. Second cycle, A2E. Alnarp: (LTJ, LTV) > Dept. of People and Society <https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/view/divisions/OID-638.html> urn:nbn:se:slu:epsilon-s-16290 eng
spellingShingle Landscape architecture
Arnett, Hannah
Invisible Bricks: urban places for social wellbeing
title Invisible Bricks: urban places for social wellbeing
title_full Invisible Bricks: urban places for social wellbeing
title_fullStr Invisible Bricks: urban places for social wellbeing
title_full_unstemmed Invisible Bricks: urban places for social wellbeing
title_short Invisible Bricks: urban places for social wellbeing
title_sort invisible bricks: urban places for social wellbeing
topic Landscape architecture
url https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/16290/
https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/16290/