Affiliation:
1. West Pomeranian University of Technology in Szczecin
2. Technische Universiteit Delft (TU Delft)
Abstract
This article identifies the key factors either supporting or blocking the implementation of the Right to the City concept in the urban planning systems of Brazil and Poland. Poland and Brazil, despite some differences, can be compared from the perspective of selected features of spatial planning systems. A characterisation of the spatial planning systems of both countries, including their legal and socio-political conditions, is made. The article identifies these institutional challenges and barriers in both national spatial planning systems, which can be linked to a discussion of the Right to the City concept. It then analyses how elements of the Right to the City concept are implemented in each system and what constitutes the main barrier. Those elements of the Right to the City concept that can be more universally compared were identified. The commonalities and discrepancies found in the two systems are then discussed. In Brazil, the Right to the City concept is much more strongly framed in formal and legal terms, but market and social inequalities are a barrier to its implementation. In Poland, on the other hand, there is a broader institutional inertia in the implementation of the concept. In both countries, there are serious (different) barriers related to the implementation of the Right to the City concept in the urban planning system.
Publisher
Institute of Geography and Spatial Organization, Polish Academy of Sciences
Reference55 articles.
1. Apostolopoulou, E., & Kotsila, P. (2022). Community gardening in Hellinikon as a resistance struggle against neoliberal urbanism: Spatial autogestion and the Right to the City in post-crisis Athens, Greece. Urban Geography, 43(2), 293-319. https://doi.org/10.1080/02723638.2020.1863621 DOI
2. Bacqué, M.-H., & Gauthier, M. (2017). Participation, urban planning, and urban studies: Four decades of debates and experiments since SR Arnstein's "A ladder of citizen participation". Dialogues in Urban and Regional Planning, 6, 49-79. https://doi.org/10.1177/0095399720957606 DOI
3. Bailey, N. (2019). The Right to the City: Evaluating the changing role of community participation in urban planning in England. In M. E., Leary-Owhin & J. P., McCarthy (Eds.). The Routledge Handbook of Henri Lefebvre. The City and Urban Society (pp. 422-431). London: Routledge. DOI
4. Baker, D., Marston, G., & McClure, L. (2013). Synergies and goal conflicts for climate change policy and spatial planning. Proceedings REAL CORP 2013 Tagungsband, 871-877.
5. Binandeh, M., Mahmoodi, J., & Sanaee, A. (2020). Urban Spatial Policies and the Right to the City: Institutional Ethnography of subalterns Urban Neighborhoods (Case study: Old neighborhoods of Aghazman, Qatarchian, Jurabad and Korabad in Sanandaj). Sociology of Culture and Art, 2(3), 48-26. https://doi.org/10.34785/j016.2021.592 DOI
Cited by
1 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献