Hybrid suburbia: New research perspectives in France and Southern California

Geographical research on French and US suburbia has concentrated in recent decades on urban sprawl and concomitant processes of devaluation and exclusion. In the case of the French banlieues, with their much-publicised urban riots, this particular analytic focus has become overwhelming, with resulta...

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Main Authors: Weber Florian, Kühne Olaf
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Sciendo 2017-12-01
Series:Quaestiones Geographicae
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1515/quageo-2017-0033
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spelling doaj-b3324fa4e0d8472794b0aeb0afa2a8222021-09-05T20:51:29ZengSciendoQuaestiones Geographicae2081-63832017-12-01364172810.1515/quageo-2017-0033quageo-2017-0033Hybrid suburbia: New research perspectives in France and Southern CaliforniaWeber Florian0Kühne Olaf1Department of Geography, University of Tübingen, GermanyDepartment of Geography, University of Tübingen, GermanyGeographical research on French and US suburbia has concentrated in recent decades on urban sprawl and concomitant processes of devaluation and exclusion. In the case of the French banlieues, with their much-publicised urban riots, this particular analytic focus has become overwhelming, with resultant loss to other developments and perspectives. However, certain districts in the first (or inner) ring of both French and US suburbia are currently showing distinct urbanisation tendencies in planning and architecture, evident in the new usage of brownfield sites and the ongoing demolition, replacement, and rededication of the older building core. Such processes induce population changes, e.g. the displacement of lower in favour of higher income groups. Overall, they result in an architectonic, social and cultural heterogeneity that escapes the specificity of received categories and merits the term hybridisation. The article describes and compares these processes as exemplified in Greater Paris and San Diego (Southern California).https://doi.org/10.1515/quageo-2017-0033suburbiasouthern californiafrancestigmatisationurban-rural hybrids
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Weber Florian
Kühne Olaf
spellingShingle Weber Florian
Kühne Olaf
Hybrid suburbia: New research perspectives in France and Southern California
Quaestiones Geographicae
suburbia
southern california
france
stigmatisation
urban-rural hybrids
author_facet Weber Florian
Kühne Olaf
author_sort Weber Florian
title Hybrid suburbia: New research perspectives in France and Southern California
title_short Hybrid suburbia: New research perspectives in France and Southern California
title_full Hybrid suburbia: New research perspectives in France and Southern California
title_fullStr Hybrid suburbia: New research perspectives in France and Southern California
title_full_unstemmed Hybrid suburbia: New research perspectives in France and Southern California
title_sort hybrid suburbia: new research perspectives in france and southern california
publisher Sciendo
series Quaestiones Geographicae
issn 2081-6383
publishDate 2017-12-01
description Geographical research on French and US suburbia has concentrated in recent decades on urban sprawl and concomitant processes of devaluation and exclusion. In the case of the French banlieues, with their much-publicised urban riots, this particular analytic focus has become overwhelming, with resultant loss to other developments and perspectives. However, certain districts in the first (or inner) ring of both French and US suburbia are currently showing distinct urbanisation tendencies in planning and architecture, evident in the new usage of brownfield sites and the ongoing demolition, replacement, and rededication of the older building core. Such processes induce population changes, e.g. the displacement of lower in favour of higher income groups. Overall, they result in an architectonic, social and cultural heterogeneity that escapes the specificity of received categories and merits the term hybridisation. The article describes and compares these processes as exemplified in Greater Paris and San Diego (Southern California).
topic suburbia
southern california
france
stigmatisation
urban-rural hybrids
url https://doi.org/10.1515/quageo-2017-0033
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