Social Responsibility for Architects in a Global Construction Practice: A Theoretical Foundation

This article seeks to conceptualise an understanding of the role and the nature of socially responsible architects and their architectural firms in a rapidly growing global construction market. Recognising a construction site as a key field for architectural and urban research, the theoretical frame...

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Main Author: Clarissa Rhomberg
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: AESOP Association of the European Schools of Planning 2018-12-01
Series:PlaNext
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.aesop-planning.eu/volume-7/article-54/
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spelling doaj-7bc9cb145995460caa003aebf1c8301e2020-11-25T02:39:37ZengAESOP Association of the European Schools of PlanningPlaNext2468-06482018-12-01713614910.24306/plnxt/54Social Responsibility for Architects in a Global Construction Practice: A Theoretical FoundationClarissa RhombergThis article seeks to conceptualise an understanding of the role and the nature of socially responsible architects and their architectural firms in a rapidly growing global construction market. Recognising a construction site as a key field for architectural and urban research, the theoretical framework reflects the need for working interdisciplinary to understand current phenomena, the social conditions of global building production, the role of the architect within a globalised building practice, and the perspective of governance ethics. Therefore, it brings together various theoretical perspectives from (1) the profession of the architect, (2) the role of ethics in globalised professional design services, (3) corporate governance and business ethics, as well as (4) stakeholder theory. In particular, the paper describes the rapid intensification of moral challenges in this contemporary global construction practice, and it concludes that the social principles of justice and inclusiveness need to be embedded in architecture, planning, and construction.http://journals.aesop-planning.eu/volume-7/article-54/global architectural practiceconstructionarchitectural ethics in practicesocial responsibility
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Clarissa Rhomberg
spellingShingle Clarissa Rhomberg
Social Responsibility for Architects in a Global Construction Practice: A Theoretical Foundation
PlaNext
global architectural practice
construction
architectural ethics in practice
social responsibility
author_facet Clarissa Rhomberg
author_sort Clarissa Rhomberg
title Social Responsibility for Architects in a Global Construction Practice: A Theoretical Foundation
title_short Social Responsibility for Architects in a Global Construction Practice: A Theoretical Foundation
title_full Social Responsibility for Architects in a Global Construction Practice: A Theoretical Foundation
title_fullStr Social Responsibility for Architects in a Global Construction Practice: A Theoretical Foundation
title_full_unstemmed Social Responsibility for Architects in a Global Construction Practice: A Theoretical Foundation
title_sort social responsibility for architects in a global construction practice: a theoretical foundation
publisher AESOP Association of the European Schools of Planning
series PlaNext
issn 2468-0648
publishDate 2018-12-01
description This article seeks to conceptualise an understanding of the role and the nature of socially responsible architects and their architectural firms in a rapidly growing global construction market. Recognising a construction site as a key field for architectural and urban research, the theoretical framework reflects the need for working interdisciplinary to understand current phenomena, the social conditions of global building production, the role of the architect within a globalised building practice, and the perspective of governance ethics. Therefore, it brings together various theoretical perspectives from (1) the profession of the architect, (2) the role of ethics in globalised professional design services, (3) corporate governance and business ethics, as well as (4) stakeholder theory. In particular, the paper describes the rapid intensification of moral challenges in this contemporary global construction practice, and it concludes that the social principles of justice and inclusiveness need to be embedded in architecture, planning, and construction.
topic global architectural practice
construction
architectural ethics in practice
social responsibility
url http://journals.aesop-planning.eu/volume-7/article-54/
work_keys_str_mv AT clarissarhomberg socialresponsibilityforarchitectsinaglobalconstructionpracticeatheoreticalfoundation
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